Intel Intel Mobile Pentium Dual-Core T2080 1.73GHz 1M 533FSB sM LP. Parts can usually not be interchanged - please check to make sure that your original part has this part number or that the manufacturer recommends this replacement part for your system. Special offers and product promotions. Processor name (BIOS) Genuine Intel(R) CPU T2080 @ 1.73GHz: Pentium(R) Dual-Core CPU T4500 @ 2.30GHz: Cores: 2: Logical processors: 2: Processor type: Original OEM Processor: CPUID signature: 6EC: 1067A: Family: 6 (06h) Model: 14 (0Eh) 23 (017h) Stepping: 12 (0Ch) 10 (0Ah) TLB/Cache details: 64-byte Prefetching Data TLB: 4-KB Pages, 4-way set.
Ferrenrock wrote:Genuine Intel Cpu T2080 Drivers
We put the 1.73 GHz Intel T2080 to the test against the 1.44 GHz x5-Z8300 to find out which you should buy. We’ve benchmarked 107 CPU units to provide a trusted benchmark score for this Intel’s 2-core processor. Intel Pentium T2080 @ 1.73GHz was released in 2008 and supports PGA478 socket.
Genuine Intel Cpu T2300
SL9VY GENUINE ORIGINAL INTEL PENTIUM T2080 1.73GHZ 800MHZ SOCKET M SERIES. Intel SL52R Pentium III 1000MHz CPU Socket 370 COSTA RICA Genuine Intel TESTED.
cerbie wrote:T2080 is a Core Duo (Yonah), for practical purposes. My Google-fu revealed this:
http://ark.intel.com/cpu.aspx?groupId=29740
I know, but what does Yonah go under? There is no 'yonah' option, moreover, it isn't listed under 'help' in any of the processor families. These are my options:
Yonah is the code name for that specific core. Core Duo and Intel Dual-Core are brand names to sell the processors under.
A Pentium Dual-Core may be a Yonah (Core family), Merom (basically Conroe, Core 2), or Allendale (Core 2).
A Core Solo or Core Duo will only be Yonah. The Pentium Dual-Core variant just has half the L2 cache.
A Pentium 4 could be a Willamette, Northwood (A,B,C), or Prescott (D,E). The Prescott has had many revisions of other code names, and was a significantly chip from the previous Pentium 4 CPUs (initially, it was crap; but, after a few revisions, and compilers targeting it, it was OK). I forget where Cedar Mill fits in there, if at all, to consumer chips (it's basically, 'we can fit more stuff on the Prescott die--cheap! Let's do it!').
A modern Celeron could be a Willamette, Northwood (as crappy as Deschutes, FYI), Prescott (D), Cedar Mill (D), or Allendale (Dual-Core).
There's no reason to give a single CPU its own tuning or architecture feature set, unless it really needs it. The Pentium-M sucked in many ways, so it needed it (they're not bad chips or anything, but were rushed out, due to AMD gaining ground in Notebooks). All of their chips since were designed to take the same kind of code as the Prescott, including the Atom, which is about as far away from the Prescott as you can get.
Genuine Intel Cpu T2080
Last edited by cerbie (2008-11-23 03:09:23)
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