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What is the difference between a Pentium and a Celeron processor?
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<blockquote data-quote="ibba" data-source="post: 26215" data-attributes="member: 572"><p><strong>Processor speed *alone* has no meaning</strong></p><p></p><p>Hi dudes,</p><p></p><p>This may be a late note, but thought of giving some insight in to the original discussion. </p><p>Yes, Celeron is slower than the pentium. But for the "peformance" you see, its not the only contributor. For something to see as performant, your processor, memory, mother board and its bus speed, hard disk, etc as a set should be fast. Even if you have a 3.8GHz processor with a slow RAM, your PC might not perform as much as you like. </p><p>Again, this performance depends on the type of operation or the application you are running. </p><p>Remember, I don't think 95% of the PC users use at least 10% of the power of a PC. I strongly discourage when they try to buy the best available computer in the market. </p><p>My recommendation is to get a reasonably speed celeron processor (if you are not doing Autocad), get 512 DDR RAM, 7200 rpm Hard disk and a mother board which has at least 333 or 400 FSB (Front side bus speed - this is the rate at which the mother board can support data transfers among devices) and mother board compatible with Chips (mother board with intel chipset for Intel processors. Remember intel chipset only. Intel m/board is costly. Gigabyte m/board with an intel chipset would be fine. For AMD processors buy MSI motherboards.). </p><p></p><p>If you are not doing high end things, buy a Celeron or an AMD and invest on RAM or any other thing mentioned above to improve the performance.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ibba, post: 26215, member: 572"] [b]Processor speed *alone* has no meaning[/b] Hi dudes, This may be a late note, but thought of giving some insight in to the original discussion. Yes, Celeron is slower than the pentium. But for the "peformance" you see, its not the only contributor. For something to see as performant, your processor, memory, mother board and its bus speed, hard disk, etc as a set should be fast. Even if you have a 3.8GHz processor with a slow RAM, your PC might not perform as much as you like. Again, this performance depends on the type of operation or the application you are running. Remember, I don't think 95% of the PC users use at least 10% of the power of a PC. I strongly discourage when they try to buy the best available computer in the market. My recommendation is to get a reasonably speed celeron processor (if you are not doing Autocad), get 512 DDR RAM, 7200 rpm Hard disk and a mother board which has at least 333 or 400 FSB (Front side bus speed - this is the rate at which the mother board can support data transfers among devices) and mother board compatible with Chips (mother board with intel chipset for Intel processors. Remember intel chipset only. Intel m/board is costly. Gigabyte m/board with an intel chipset would be fine. For AMD processors buy MSI motherboards.). If you are not doing high end things, buy a Celeron or an AMD and invest on RAM or any other thing mentioned above to improve the performance. [/QUOTE]
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