Processors do not have permanent memory. When power is not supplied any more they loose all data.
But motherboards have a special chip that keeps settings for whole system including CPU. If you need to reset something it would be the motherboard.
It depends on your PC configration
It depends on what you want to use your PC for. The amd will not be as good for single-threaded applications as the intel, but it will be better for multy-threaded. AMD also has far superior graphics. I think for most people's overall useage, I would go with the A8
The minimum system requirements for Call of Duty 4 on the PC are CPU: Intel(R) Pentium(R) 4 2.4 GHz or AMD(R) Athlon(TM) RAM: 512MB RAM (768MB for Windows Vista)64 2800+ processor or any 1.8Ghz Dual Core Processor or better supported Video card (generic): NVIDIA(R) Geforce(TM) 6600 or better or ATI(R) Radeon(R) 9800Pro or better HDD: 8GB of free hard drive space
Yes it will.
Tin is a metal element. There are 50 electrons in a single atom.
The Pentium family of processors, which has its roots in the Intel486(TM) processor, uses the Intel486 instruction set (with a few additional instructions). The term ''Pentium processor'' refers to a family of microprocessors that share a common architecture and instruction set. The first Pentium processors (the P5 variety) were introduced in 1993. This 5.0-V processor was fabricated in 0.8-micron bipolar complementary metal oxide semiconductor (BiCMOS) technology. The P5 processor runs at a clock frequency of either 60 or 66 MHz and has 3.1 million transistors. The next version of the Pentium processor family, the P54C processor, was introduced in 1994. The P54C processors are fabricated in 3.3-V, 0.6-micron BiCMOS technology. The P54C processor also has System Management Mode (SMM) for advanced power management The Intel Pentium processor, like its predecessor the Intel486 microprocessor, is fully software compatible with the installed base of over 100 million compatible Intel architecture systems. In addition, the Intel Pentium processor provides new levels of performance to new and existing software through a reimplementation of the Intel 32-bit instruction set architecture using the latest, most advanced, design techniques. Optimized, dual execution units provide one-clock execution for "core" instructions, while advanced technology, such as superscalar architecture, branch prediction, and execution pipelining, enables multiple instructions to execute in parallel with high efficiency. Separate code and data caches combined with wide 128-bit and 256-bit internal data paths and a 64-bit, burstable, external bus allow these performance levels to be sustained in cost-effective systems. The application of this advanced technology in the Intel Pentium processor brings "state of the art" performance and capability to existing Intel architecture software as well as new and advanced applications. The Pentium processor has two primary operating modes and a "system management mode." The operating mode determines which instructions and architectural features are accessible.
yes
No. The laptop was designed for single core Intel processors.
Ofcourse it can...lol
to do this type (TM) In words open bracket TM closed bracket (TM)
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do you want to noe what is TM 5? it is roar