Yes.
um looking at the speed difference the 2 ghz and 2mb cache is better but if the speed diff. was like 2 ghz and 2mb vs 3ghz and 1 mb then go in for the 3 ghz one as in this case the larger memory storage gives u an advantage in many areas
Approximately.... 1MB = 200KB 2MB = 400KB
This is a great question, and the answer is undeniably 2 ghz w/ 2MB cache. Take this analogy: You need to move 100 tons of dirt. You have A) A pickup truck and B) a Honda Civic. The Honda Civic is faster, but the pickup truck can move move at a given interval. The "Dirt" is the data trying to process on the CPU; the vehicle is the cache type. The CPU uses the cache to temporarily store information and quickly access it while it's working. It runs extremely fast (multiple gigahertz / second) and is extremely close to the CPU (literally on the same die). If you do not have room on your cache level, the CPU is forced to use the much slower RAM to store its information.
Intel core 4
yes i have dell gx280 3.0 gh with 2 mb cache
Larger the size is better but it is hard to know how much better. Read/Write latency (time) is also an important factor for performance.
Yes it is 2mb!
Both processors are in the Pentium Dual Core family. The Pentium Dual Core E2200 is better than the other.
The main difference is the manufacturing technology. CPUs of the series T5xxx and T7xxx are of the Merom core and manufactured on a 65nm structure. The T8xxx and T9xxx are of the Penryn core and manufactured on a 45nm structure. Because of the reduced structure it was possible to increase the L2 cache by 1MB (on the T8xxx series) resp. 2MB (on the T9xxx series). Difference between T5450 and T8100 T5450: 1.66Ghz, 2MB L2 cache, 667Mhz FSB, Merom 65nm T8100: 2.1Ghz, 3MB L2 cache, 800Mhz FSB, Penryn 45nm these 2 processors are interchangeable because both uses Socket P (Santa Rosa platform).
This "3MB" is probably proceeded by "L2 cache" or "L3 cache" Or, its 3GHz. If it is 3MB, then it is referring to the instruction-caching memory that is built right into the processor, a few small panels of extremely fast memory that temporarily store instructions for the processor. The including of cache greatly increased a processors overall performance. The L2 and L3 portion refer to levels of cache. L1 Cache is very small, typically two blocks of 32KB or 64Kb. This Cache is the fastest, used for branch prediction and direct instruction strings. L2 Cache is larger, typically 1MB or 2MB, and also a fair deal slower than L1 cache. L3 Cache is the slowest, and is shared by multiple cores (If there is more than 1) and is the largest cache, typically 3MB - 16MB, depending on the processor. If it is actually 3GHz, then this is the number that reflects the number of Cycles Per Second, or Hertz, that the processor is capable of. 3Ghz is Three Giga-Hertz, or 3,000,000,000 Cycles per Second. Amazing isn't it?
how to upload your pictures on your friendster account with more than 2mb without resizing
Since 1 megabit 1mb = 1,048,576 bits 1024 kilobits = 1mb 2048 kilobits = 2mb If you meant kiloBytes KB (which is 1/8 kilobits) 256 KiloBytes = 2mb i.e. a download speed of 2 megabits/sec = 256 kiloBytes/sec = 1 megaByte every 4 seconds.