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I don't think they will try to run from you, so no concerns about their speed.
The only way to increase the processor speed is by overclocking. Through overclocking, you can increase the overall speed of the processor.
The Dell Precision 410 workstation was equipped with either a Pentium II or a Pentium III processor, at a speed between 350 and 700 MHz.
No Intel Pentium 4 processor was ever manufactured running at a clock speed of 500MHz. However, the previous product line, the Pentium III, had several variants running at that clock speed.
There is none. The Pentium D is based upon an older architecture and is slower, at any speed, than any Core 2 Duo processor.
The Latitude D610 uses an Intel Pentium M processor, and the highest speed Pentium M Processor that is officially supported by the D610 published specifications is the Pentium M Processor 770 (2.13GHz) I know of reports of the Pentium M Processor 780 (2.26Ghz) being used, but I have not personally verified these. As of my last check with Dell directly, the 770 was the highest processor officially supported. An unsupported processor means no real assistance from Dell if you're having problems.
The processor speed has increase tremendously for the last 10 years Discuss about the?
The optimal fan speed depends on the size of the heatsink and the clock rate of your processor. As such, there is no single answer.
A Pentium 4 is really limited in it's ability to run PCSX2 at a decent speed. The reason is that the Pentium 4 is a single-cored processor. If your processor supports it, make sure Hyperthreading is enabled. If your Pentium 4 support EM64T (64-bit), try running a 64-bit operating system as well.
With this being a Pentium II, or Pentium III, you would be looking at a speed of either PC100, or PC133. Hope this helps be safe Cadishead Computers
This depends on the motherboard / chipset, not the processor. Most Pentium 4s of that speed / era would probably only support DDR RAM.