The AMD K6-III and early Athlon processors are roughly equivalent in speed and performance. Via C7 processors, although released much later, are close in terms of performance to a Pentium III.
The Pentium III was available as either a slot 1 or socket 370 chip.
The Intel Pentium III is a 32-bit superscalar processor.
No. It is much more powerful.
All intel processors Pentium 4 and down were single-core, or "core solo" processors. They weren't called "Core Solo," but by what respective family they came from. Pentium I, II, III, and 4.
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.
Slot 2 is used by Intel Pentium II Xeons and Intel Pentium III Xeons. These chips were most common in servers and industrial workstations.
The Intel Pentium III was a line of 32-bit processors first released by Intel in 1999. They introduced the SSE instruction set for better multimedia performance, and the controversial unique processor serial number (which was removed in the last revision).
The Intel Pentium III was released on February 26, 1999.
Yes.
It's often difficult to compare the performance of two processors, especially when one is much older. Depending on the type of computations you are doing, you may see anything from no change to a 1700% increase in the Pentium D over the Pentium III.
No, you cannot.
The Intel Pentium Dual-Core is much faster.
They are no longer manufactured.
The L1 cache in the Pentium III is SRAM.