because my grandma invented the 5th generation, and my grandma knows every thing so you should choose 5th
In genetics, in a pure-breeding population, the parental generation is the P1 generation. The off-spring of the P1 Generation is called the F1 Generation
The series of chips that Intel produces pretty much define generations of microprocessors...or similarly for other major manufacturers. In some sense the next gen would be produced using tools that implement the previous gen, thus forming true generations. However, marketing is the real driving force. In fact, the word Pentium now really includes what could be called three generations or more (early 2010). Apparently "Sextium" didn't sound like a great marketing idea.
Pentium 4 with HT technology runs at the highest speed.
Series of processors / Generation of Pentium processors.
Pentium 4 is more powerful, and has SSE2 instructions. It is powered with HT technology.
computers
None, other than that you can get a Pentium I computer for about $5.
A few new sockets came out with Pentium 4. I know 423, 478, and 775 were used during this time. It was based on the Netburst architecture, which was new with this version of Pentium. Northwood was one of the new revisions of pentium 4, that's new too. The most gaping new technology was HTT. Hyperthreading Technology, which actually did not premier with the Pentium 4, but was developed late in the life of P4, and applied for the first time here.
A P4 usually refers to a fourth generation Pentium processor.
No get yourself a pentium 2 jackass.
The Dell Latitude CPi was a series of notebooks with a Pentium II processor or a Pentium processor with MMX technology produced as part of the Latitude C series from 1999 through 2001.
Pentium Duo Quad, Pentium core duo, Pentium D, Xeon, Itanium, Pentium M, Pentium 4, Celeron, Pentium 3, Pentium 2, Pentium Pro, 486, 386, 286.