Once can buy a Pentium 4 processor from a company that sell electronic devices. One may need to order it in the mail though. Most companies offer free shipping and handling though.
A Pentium 4 processor, and a motherboard that supports it.
The first Pentium processors (Pentium 60 - 66). A Pentium OverDrive processor is also available for it.
I'd say yes but It may be slower and may crash at times. The pentium 4 processor is faster than the Pentium 3 processor so using the pentium 3 processor made for something that is faster than it's self will have it's drawbacks and may have complications.
No. A 2.4 Ghz processor can be one of many processors, including a Pentium 4, Core 2 Duo, and Athlon 64.
Intel Pentium processor
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.
The Pentium D is basically a dual-cored version of the Pentium 4. It is nowhere near as efficient or powerful as a Core 2 Duo, and it actually generates slightly more heat than a Pentium 4.
The Intel Pentium 4 3.0 GHz processor is a single core processor, but if you'd like to upgrade to dual core, have a look at the Intel Pentium 4 531 3.0GHz Processor Upgrade RH008AV.
The Pentium 4 and Pentium 4 HT differ only in the "HT" designation, which means "Hyper-Threading". Hyper-Threading allows one physical processor to represent itself as two "logical" processors to the computer, doubling the amount of tasks the computer can work on. It effectively allows you to have a dual-core processor while only paying for a single-core. Get the Pentium 4 HT!
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.
All Pentium 4 processors support SSE2.
Neither. It is a computer processor.