Intel Pentium D in Europe

Zero001

New Member
Hello guys, i'm new here...

so i'm asking if anyone knows any online stores here in europe where i would be able to buy intel pentium d (925, 940,...), or if not pentium d, celeron d... I'm from Slovenia and of course i can't find the processor here in my country...
Thanks! :)
 
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Damn brother .... I live in Macedonia F.Y.R.O.M and we can find every piece of technology we need my uncle has a Pentium D and i know a store in Skopje were you can even buy CORE i7 im so confused....

by the way i dont know any online stores were you can buy the Pentium D or Celeron D
 
I would look to buy a motherboard that supports a Pentium E and buy a Pentium E processor. A Pentium D processor you will likely pay more than it's worth for because Intel isn't making them anymore.
 
what about pentium 4?

is it true that pentium d is the best, pentium 4 is second and then is celeron d?

I would look to buy a motherboard that supports a Pentium E and buy a Pentium E processor.

yeah, but i will likely pay more for pentum e and motherboard then just for pentium d/ p4 / celeron d...
 
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no, i have a motherboad that supports only Pentium D/ Pentium 4 and Celeron D processors (old, i know :o)

Your best option out those processors is Pentium D. If you really don't want to buy a new motherboard I would go for that. Pentium D is a Dual-Core processor and a Pentium 4 and Celeron D are Single-Core processors. Dual-Core processors are a lot better than Single-Core processors.
 
what about pentium 4?

is it true that pentium d is the best, pentium 4 is second and then is celeron d?



yeah, but i will likely pay more for pentum e and motherboard then just for pentium d/ p4 / celeron d...

To an extent. There were some higher-end P4's (wicked fast clock speed and HT) that would run circles around some of the D-series, namely the 8xx's. Once the 9xx's were introduced with a different architecture, really the only P4's you could compare them with were the 3.6 and above with HT. I had a D940 for a long time and loved it. It handled everything I threw at it with relative ease, stayed cool, and was extremely reliable. OC'd well, too, I recall:)

Like 2048 mentioned, Celeron D's are single core, not dual. Lots of people see the 'D' designation and automatically assume it's multi-core. They're actually good, reliable CPU's for certain builds. In the company of a P4 and D-series, though, just remove it from consideration.

Anyway, if you're going to get a D-series, definitely go with a 9xx, preferably a 940. Stay away from the 8xx's. However, if you have a chance to grab one of the nicer P4's (see above), that would work, too. Just make sure the P4 you get is the correct Socket type for your MoBo.
 
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