It can. You need to use the 32-bit rendition of Windows 7, though. The processor is a 32 bit processor, and is incompatible with 64-bit programming. windows 7 is a threaded operating system, which means a single-core processor will perform poorly in the Win7 environment. Don't be discouraged, though-- This all means little in real-world performance, and running Win7 with a Celeron should be fine!
it seems celeron is better unless Pentium has 2 cores
2.26 Gigahertz is the speed
Intel celeron is the lowest processor Intel offers. Below is the list from best to worst: Intel core i7 Intel core i5 Intel core 2 quad Intel core 2 duo Intel core 2 solo Intel pentium Intel celeron For laptops: Intel core i7 Intel core 2 extreme Intel core 2 quad Intel core 2 duo Intel centrino Intel pentium Intel celeron
Plenty of older processors have had 1GHz FSB. Intel Celeron is one of them.
With the dual core you can process more, but with the pentium at a slightly higher rate, I'd go with the celeron however.
Yes, it can support Pentium 4 2.60 Ghz microprocessors.
No, it has single core technology. These are the options that come with that model: Intel Pentium 4 that runs at 1.80, 2.00, 2.40, or 2.50 GHz Intel Celeron that runs at 1.70, 2.00, 2.10, 2.20, or 2.30 GHz
Core Duo
The AMD Turion 64 MK38 processor out performs the Intel Celeron M 440 processor due to its multiple cores and higher clock speed. However, the Celeron M 440 uses up less power and produces less heat.
Possibly. "Celeron" doesn't refer to any particular processor. They are cost-reduced versions of the Intel Pentium II, Pentium III, Pentium 4, Pentium M, and Core 2 Duo. Assuming that your Celeron is based on a processor that is faster than the Pentium III, you shouldn't have any problems. If yours is based on the Pentium III, check the clock speed. A 1.2 GHz Celeron, for instance, is probably fast enough for a game that requires a 1 GHz Pentium III.Other factors, such as the graphics card of your system, may also be important.
The will depend on the benchmark and the particular chips selected to benchmark. A 1.6 GHz Intel Atom is slightly faster than a 1.1 GHz Pentium III on a SuperPi benchmark. A 1.4 GHz Pentium III would thus likely beat it. In a multi-threaded benchmark, the Atom would likely beat the Pentium III, due to the Atom's inclusion of Hyperthreading.
what is the difference between celeron and ghz speed