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I recently purchased a new laptop with Windows 11 and an i9 CPU. My first impression was less than wow. In fact, it seemed slower than the laptop it replaced. The punch line is, you pay for a lot of extra cores that are not any faster than an i7 or i5. Maybe even an i3. At any rate, I recently started looking at CPU usage and discovered a mode I hadn’t noticed before: PARKED CPU. Yep, apparently, Windows puts unused CPUs in parked mode to save energy. I noticed several times that all but one of my CPUs was parked. Only occasionally, I may see 3 CPUs actually working. Yes, my workflow is mostly sitting in a programmer’s IDE like VS Code or Visual Studio. Then I may compile some code now and then. I may open a browser or read my emails. That’s about it. So I paid double what I needed to, just so I could have an i9 badge on my laptop. I feel ashamed.

Some of you may want to know what computer I bought: it’s an ASUS Q540VJ. I way over provisioned it with RAM and SSD. I like the hardware, don’t mis-understand me. I just way over over bought. The Q530 would have been more appropriate, in my case.

I recently purchased a new laptop with Windows 11 and an i9 CPU. My first impression was less than wow. In fact, it seemed slower than the laptop it replaced. The punch line is, you pay for a lot of extra cores that are not any faster than an i7 or i5. Maybe even an i3. At any rate, I recently started looking at CPU usage and discovered a mode I hadn’t noticed before: PARKED CPU. Yep, apparently, Windows puts unused CPUs in parked mode to save energy. I noticed several times that all but one of my CPUs was parked. Only occasionally, I may see 3 CPUs actually working. Yes, my workflow is mostly sitting in a programmer’s IDE like VS Code or Visual Studio. Then I may compile some code now and then. I may open a browser or read my emails. That’s about it. So I paid double what I needed to, just so I could have an i9 badge on my laptop. I feel ashamed. Some of you may want to know what computer I bought: it’s an ASUS Q540VJ. I way over provisioned it with RAM and SSD. I like the hardware, don’t mis-understand me. I just way over over bought. The Q530 would have been more appropriate, in my case.

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[–] 1 pt

How much RAM? Load Debian and Virtualbox on it and you can run Win Servers to test with. You don't really need to know linux inside and out if you are mostly developing .NET. Just set up an internal virtualbox network between them. Do not use that Hyper V garbage.