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.
Intel i3 is superior to Pentium 4.
yes
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.
It wasn't. It was introduced back when the Pentium II was introduced. The Celeron was created because the L2 cache chips used in the Pentium II were rather expensive, and they wanted to provide a low-end alternative.
Possibly. "Celeron" doesn't refer to any particular processor. They are cost-reduced versions of the Intel Pentium II, Pentium III, Pentium 4, Pentium M, and Core 2 Duo. Assuming that your Celeron is based on a processor that is faster than the Pentium III, you shouldn't have any problems. If yours is based on the Pentium III, check the clock speed. A 1.2 GHz Celeron, for instance, is probably fast enough for a game that requires a 1 GHz Pentium III.Other factors, such as the graphics card of your system, may also be important.
The Intel Pentium Dual-Core is much faster.
The Intel Pentium III was released on February 26, 1999.
Sort of. The processor is an Intel Coppermine-core processor that runs at 733 MHz. It is soldered onto the motherboard in BGA2 fashion, similar to that found in many older Pentium III and Celeron laptops. The processor can't be considered a Pentium III because it has half the L2 cache of a normal Pentium III at that speed and FSB. It's not a quite a Celeron either, though, since no other Celeron in that layout had that high an FSB (133 MHz in the Xbox vs. 100 MHz for other mobile Celerons. It thus sits somewhere in between in terms of performance.Architecturally, it is no different than a Pentium III, though. Linux applications written for the Pentium III can run without modification on the Xbox.
Yes.
No, you cannot.
Intel offers Pentium Pro, Pentium II, Celeron, Pentium II Xeon, Pentium III, Pentium II and III Xeon, Celeron with Pentium III Based, Pentium 4, Pentium M, Intel Core, Dual Core Xeon LV, Intel Pentium Dual Core, Intel Core 2. Pentium Duo, Pentium Dual Core, Core 2 Quad, Intel Pentuim 2 Dual Core PrAMD processors include AMD Athlon, AMD Athlon 64, AMD Athlon X2, AMD Athlon Xp, AMD Duron, AMD Sempron, AMD Turion, MD Opteron and AMD Phenom 1.
They are no longer manufactured.
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.
The L1 cache in the Pentium III is SRAM.