K kknaveenkumar Commendable Jul 3, 2016 1 0 1,510 Jul 3, 2016 #1 The processor should able to run engineering softwares lke AutoCAD, Ansys and Pro E without getting stuck. Is G3240 enough for this purpose or should i go with i3? There is a huge price gap between these two as G3240 is cheaper.. Thanks in advance.
The processor should able to run engineering softwares lke AutoCAD, Ansys and Pro E without getting stuck. Is G3240 enough for this purpose or should i go with i3? There is a huge price gap between these two as G3240 is cheaper.. Thanks in advance.
Solution BadActor Jul 3, 2016 I'm sure the i3 would be the better of the two, but neither is going to be ideal for productivity, especially with Ansys.
I'm sure the i3 would be the better of the two, but neither is going to be ideal for productivity, especially with Ansys.
S spoofer2 Honorable Mar 19, 2014 254 0 10,810 Jul 3, 2016 #2 i honestly dont know how much those programs need but you could probably find out what the recommended specs are by going to their website. Upvote 0 Downvote
i honestly dont know how much those programs need but you could probably find out what the recommended specs are by going to their website.
BadActor Expert Ambassador Oct 31, 2015 8,749 1 54,965 Jul 3, 2016 Solution #3 I'm sure the i3 would be the better of the two, but neither is going to be ideal for productivity, especially with Ansys. Upvote 0 Downvote Solution
I'm sure the i3 would be the better of the two, but neither is going to be ideal for productivity, especially with Ansys.
D dudeman509 Dignified Jan 23, 2015 4,077 35 17,040 Jul 3, 2016 #4 The i3 would be the better of the 2 due to its 4 threads; something like an i5-4460 would be even better due to the 4 physical cores. Upvote 0 Downvote
The i3 would be the better of the 2 due to its 4 threads; something like an i5-4460 would be even better due to the 4 physical cores.