cache structure of pentium
The L1 cache on a Pentium 3 (And most all processors) is divided into two caches, the data cache and the instruction cache. This may be because the instructions tend to have a high spacial locality while data has higher temporal locality. At any rate, all 4 variants of the Pentium III used 16Kb data cache and 16Kb instruction cache, which makes 32Kb total. (The size of L2 cache varied based on the core.)
Both processors are in the Pentium Dual Core family. The Pentium Dual Core E2200 is better than the other.
Yes it is 2mb!
AnswerA Celeron was a cost-reduced version of an Intel Pentium II, Pentium III, Pentium 4, Pentium D, or Pentium M. It was made cheaper by not including as much L2 cache (the first ones had none at all), and was aimed primarily at the lower-end market.
pentium 4 more faster
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.
Celeron refers to a line of processors from Intel. They are low-cost counterparts of Pentium II, III, 4, M, and D processors. They differ mainly in the amount of L2 cache. Celerons have a smaller L2 cache, which is basically a buffer in the CPU to avoid slowdown. With a smaller L2 cache, Celerons perform slightly worse in some processor-intensive applications.
An Intel core duo 2.6ghz has a higher cache, and 2 cores as opposed to 1, both of which run at 2.6ghz. This makes it far far faster than any Pentium 4.
As a whole, the Pentium 4 has a higher maximum performance than a Pentium III. The Pentium III performs the same as or better than Pentium 4 at the same clock speed, but the Pentium 4 has a higher max clock speed (which the Pentium 4 was designed for).
Pentium 4 with HT technology runs at the highest speed.
Pentium 4 vs. Dual CoreThere are MANY differences between these two generations of Intel CPU's. Most notably, Duo Core CPU's possess two processing cores opposed to the Pentium 4's single processing core. While a Duo Core CPU may be operating at a lower overall operating frequency, it is still much more powerful then a Pentium 4 considering it's improved FSB speed, cache size, multiple cores, efficiency, etc.
no way