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.
A Pentium 4 processor, and a motherboard that supports it.
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.
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 first Pentium processors (Pentium 60 - 66). A Pentium OverDrive processor is also available for it.
Yes.
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.
No. A Pentium Dual Core is a cost-reduced version of a Core 2 Duo. Think of it as the new equivalent of a Celeron. The Pentium D is basically a dual-cored version of the Pentium 4, but is far less efficient than a Core 2 Duo (or a Pentium Dual Core).
Intel Pentium processor
4004 8008 8086 and series go on 80286 80386 80486 Pentium 1 Pentium 2 Pentium 3 Pentium 4 Dual core Core 2 duo Core 2 Quad Upto CoreI7 So basically in a long time period Pentium 4 is an improvement on 8085 and basically today micro code of all these processor is of 8085
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.
yes