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.
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.
non!!! Intel celeron is better than Intel Pentium dual core
it seems celeron is better unless Pentium has 2 cores
No. The Celeron and Pentium Ms predate the Intel Core line by several years.
The Intel Pentium T4300 by a pretty good margin The Celeron has a reduced cache compliment with substantially reduces it's performance, even if the frequency and FSB were higher.
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.
Intel celeron is the lowest processor Intel offers. Below is the list from best to worst: Intel core i7 Intel core i5 Intel core 2 quad Intel core 2 duo Intel core 2 solo Intel pentium Intel celeron For laptops: Intel core i7 Intel core 2 extreme Intel core 2 quad Intel core 2 duo Intel centrino Intel pentium Intel celeron
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.
With the dual core you can process more, but with the pentium at a slightly higher rate, I'd go with the celeron however.
the Core, the Pentium, the Celeron, and the Atom families
Pentium Duo Quad, Pentium core duo, Pentium D, Xeon, Itanium, Pentium M, Pentium 4, Celeron, Pentium 3, Pentium 2, Pentium Pro, 486, 386, 286.
It is and it isn't. Intel has packaged a large number of different processors as "pentium 2" and "celeron." The celeron tended to be the "budget processor," but due to availability the Celeron frequently was actually a real Pentium 2. The Celerons were labeled and set to report that they were weaker than they really were. This is where overclocking comes in. Overclockers found that Celerons could be overclocked just as well as the Pentium 2 chips on certain production runs. A little more research showed what actually was going on.