There were a few laptops that used Pentium 4s. However, Pentium 4s generated too much heat and drew too much power for them to be practical.
A Pentium 4 processor, and a motherboard that supports it.
The first Pentium processors (Pentium 60 - 66). A Pentium OverDrive processor is also available for it.
Yes, there are some "no name" laptop brands that use desktop CPU-s onto their laptop motherboards. I have a laptop of "Vobis" manufacturer and I'm using Pentium 4 , 2.4 GHz, 533 MHz FSB desktop CPU in that machine.
I'd say yes but It may be slower and may crash at times. The pentium 4 processor is faster than the Pentium 3 processor so using the pentium 3 processor made for something that is faster than it's self will have it's drawbacks and may have complications.
Intel Pentium processor
The Pentium D is basically a dual-cored version of the Pentium 4. It is nowhere near as efficient or powerful as a Core 2 Duo, and it actually generates slightly more heat than a Pentium 4.
No. The newer processor will not use the same motherboard.
The Intel Pentium 4 3.0 GHz processor is a single core processor, but if you'd like to upgrade to dual core, have a look at the Intel Pentium 4 531 3.0GHz Processor Upgrade RH008AV.
There is no Pentium 5 processor. The mainstream (non-budget) Pentium line ends with the Pentium D, which is essentially a dual-core Pentium 4. The Core Solo, Core Duo, Core 2 Duo, and Core 2 Quad all have a very different architecture from the Pentium 4.
A computer with a Pentium 4 processor can use any color for its case.
One can buy Pentium 4 laptop from eBay, PC World, Very, Amazon, John Lewis, Nextag and Low Price Shopper stores. One should know what one wants to use the laptop for, so that one can get the correct specifications, which can be the memory size, the storage, processor as well as the dimensions or weight of the laptop.
All Pentium 4 processors support SSE2.