What if it was a P4-based Celeron? ... then again its not possiblep3 hands down. celerons are dumbed down pentium chips
homeboy said:what one is better for runing win xp home and playing doom 2?
intel p3 500mhz OR
intel celeron 500mhz
what one is better?
hmm how to say this 500mhz cel vs p2 yes, 500mhz cel vs p3...uh no. I think you have your facts reversed.omsairam said:What Intel plays down-- but nearly everyone knows-- is that the full-speed, quarter-size Celeron cache gives them almost the same performance as the half-speed, full-size cache gives Pentiums. Thus you'll find that, for most applications, Celerons rated at the same MHz will equal or better an equivalent Pentium-II, for a much lower price.
the celeron and p3 will perform similarly but the p3 is faster, although not noticably in all applications. The big differnces are bus speed and cache size. P3s run at 100 and 133mhz where the celerons run at 66mhzIntel April 2000 said:The 0.18 micron Pentium(R) III processor has 256KB of eight-way set associative on die L2 cache. The latest Celeron processor has 128K of four-way set associative on die L2 cache. Both processors have the same clock counts as far as latency. We don't disclose how many clocks, but they are the same for both products.
Naturally.k so I should go wit p3 ?
ASssuming they are both P3 based Celerons (which is most likely the case), the P3 is not more efficient. It's faster but not more efficient. Why (not)? Because they both run off 10-stage pipes.def go with p3 its much more efficient than a celeron.
You need to make a distinction with P3s though. The Coppermines had on-die L2 and the Katmai's didnt. Your statement is also incorrect in that the Coppermine P3s only had 256K while the older Katmai's had 512KBoth Pentium-II's and -III's ship with 512kB of secondary (L2) CPU instruction cache.
-Celeron Covington's had 0K of L2The Celerons that Intel first introduced as a low-cost CPU alternative (266 & 300MHz versions) were basically just Pentium-II's without any L2 cache at all.
You do? Xeons are expensive because of their scaling capacity....For a full-speed L2 in a Pentium design, you need to get into Intel's (much more expensive) Xeon line.
Very true however in a day an age where all L2 caches operate at full speed, and where the pipelines are getting (ridiculously long), the quarter cache is a major disadvantageWhat Intel plays down-- but nearly everyone knows-- is that the full-speed, quarter-size Celeron cache gives them almost the same performance as the half-speed, full-size cache gives Pentiums.
.I should probably pre-empt the argument that 4-way is faster than 8-way set associative by explaining what 4/8-way set associative cache is
While we're knee deep in cache-land, any idea why Intel chose to do inclusive L2 caching? (i.e., L1 is mirrored in L2)A set associative cache divides the cache into various sections, referred to as sets, with each set containing a number of cache lines. With a 4-way set associative L2 cache, each set contains 4 cache lines, and in an 8-way set associative L2 cache, each set contains 8 cache lines.
8-way has an increased hit rate over 4-way which makes it faster as the amount of system RAM increase.
as we were discussing earlier, I suspect it has to do with Intel's higher latencies, where AMD can run exclusive becuase they run 0 clock latency from L2 to L1 (or did in the days the coppermine p3/celerons were around, there may or may not be some latency there now) but that's just a theoryWhile we're knee deep in cache-land, any idea why Intel chose to do inclusive L2 caching? (i.e., L1 is mirrored in L2)
Well from my most recent [according to the proc I have the direct specs on] infoas we were discussing earlier, I suspect it has to do with Intel's higher latencies, where AMD can run exclusive becuase they run 0 clock latency from L2 to L1 (or did in the days the coppermine p3/celerons were around, there may or may not be some latency there now) but that's just a theory