"Classic" Pentiums were available with clock speeds of 60, 66, 75, 90, 100, 120, 133, 150, 166, and 200 Mhz. Pentiums with MMX extensions were available in 120, 133, 150, 166, 200, 233, 266, and 300 MHz.
I don't think they will try to run from you, so no concerns about their speed.
There are version of Intel Pentium one through four as well as Intel Pentium Pro, Intel Pentium D, Intel Pentium M, Pentium (2009), and Pentium Duel Core.
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).
No Intel Pentium 4 processor was ever manufactured running at a clock speed of 500MHz. However, the previous product line, the Pentium III, had several variants running at that clock speed.
Intel 8088 Intel 8086 Intel 286 Intel 386 Intel 486 Intel Pentium Intel Pentium II Intel Pentium III Intel Pentium IV Intel Itanium Motorola 6800 Zilog Z80
The original Pentium processor, released by Intel in 1994, had a clock speed of 60 MHz and later models were available at 66 MHz. This was a significant advancement at the time, offering improved performance over its predecessor, the 486 processor. The Pentium's architecture allowed for better multitasking and processing capabilities, which contributed to its popularity.
The Intel Pentium Dual-Core is much faster.
The Intel Pentium line encompasses many processors of many different architectures ranging from the original Pentium Processor of 1994 up to the Core 2 Duo based Pentium simply called the "Pentium". The Intel Pentium used to be Intel's flagship processor. Recently this position has been taken by the Core 2 Duo and Core i7. The Pentium now is reduced to a budget processor that offers lower performance but also lower cost.
No. The Pentium predates the Pentium D by more than a decade.
Yes.
The first Pentium chips had a processing speed of 60-66 MHz
On the contrary