Pentium 4 sockets were sockets numbers Socket 423 for early Pentium 4's. Then socket 478 for Pentium 4, Pentium 4 Extreme Edition and Celeron and socket T (LGA 775) for Pentium 4, Pentium D dual core, Celeron D and Pentium Extreme Edition.
No, it will not. Pentium 2 fits two sockets (with adapter for one of them) 350 and 370. When Pentium 4 fits three different sockets 423, 478, and 775.
No, the Pentium 3 and Pentium 4 are not only samples of 2 completely different architectures, but also use a different socket so a change between the 2 on the same motherboard is impossible.
The Pentium is not a risk architecture.
Slot 2 is used by Intel Pentium II Xeons and Intel Pentium III Xeons. These chips were most common in servers and industrial workstations.
Pentium Duo Quad, Pentium core duo, Pentium D, Xeon, Itanium, Pentium M, Pentium 4, Celeron, Pentium 3, Pentium 2, Pentium Pro, 486, 386, 286.
The first generation Pentium 1s used socket 4, this was quickly superseded by the short-lived socket 5, which gave way to the much more common socket 7. Socket 7 architecture remained dominant until the Pentium 2 line was released and slot 1 (and later socket 370) became dominant. Even so, AMD continued to release their k-6 CPU's for socket 7 on up into the 500 mhz range.
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.
Celeron doesn't refer to any particular processor series. Celerons were cost-reduced versions of their Pentium equivalents. The Celeron in question could be based on a Pentium 2, Pentium 3, Pentium 4, Pentium D, or Core 2 Duo. In which case the answers would be "Pentium 3, Usually Pentium 3, Celeron, Celeron, and Celeron", respectively.
No. A Pentium Dual Core is a cost-reduced version of a Core 2 Duo. Think of it as the new equivalent of a Celeron. The Pentium D is basically a dual-cored version of the Pentium 4, but is far less efficient than a Core 2 Duo (or a Pentium Dual Core).
Yes. The "D" after Pentium stands for "duo" as in dual core (2 cores)
It has 4 ALU units. A Pentium 4 has 2 ALU units. The Pentium D is like 2 P4's....sooo..... 2 cores x 2 ALU's each = 4
4004 8008 8086 and series go on 80286 80386 80486 Pentium 1 Pentium 2 Pentium 3 Pentium 4 Dual core Core 2 duo Core 2 Quad Upto CoreI7 So basically in a long time period Pentium 4 is an improvement on 8085 and basically today micro code of all these processor is of 8085