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2007-2008 Processor Guide

Specifications effective July 1, 2007

Specifications will be reviewed and updated quarterly (or more often) as appropriate (10/1, 1/1, 4/1, 7/1)

Information Systems & Computing (ISC) has developed this page to help Local Support Providers (LSPs) understand the many processor choices currently available. This guide does not discuss enthusiast, workstation, or server processors.

ISC tracks nine different lines of processors for (processors are listed in order of performance, from low to high):

AMD Sempron (speeds of up to 2.0 GHz desktop/1.8 GHz mobile)

AMD's new low-end to mid-range processor, used in low-end desktops and low-end to mid-range laptops.

Intel Celeron M (speeds of up to 1.5 GHz mobile)

Intel's previous low-end laptop processor, used in small and medium-sized low-end laptops. Good power controls and efficiency at any clock speed - a 1.5 GHz Celeron M is slightly faster than a 1.8 GHz Mobile Pentium 4.

Intel Pentium M (speeds of up to 2.13 GHz mobile)

Intel's previous high-end laptop processor, used in small and medium-sized mid-range and high-end laptops. Excellent power controls and very good efficiency at any clock speed - a 2.13 GHz Pentium M is faster than a 3.06 GHz Mobile Pentium 4.

Intel Celeron D (speeds of up to 3.06 GHz desktop)

Intel's newest low-end processor, used in low-end desktops. The Celeron D moves the Celeron from the 400 MHz to the 533 MHz front side bus.

Intel's Core Solo (speeds of up to 1.5 GHz laptop)

Intel's mid-range/low-power single core laptop processor.

Intel's Core Duo (speeds of up to 2.16 GHz desknote/2.16 GHz mobile)

Intel's mid-range dual core laptop processor.

Intel Pentium D (speeds of up to 3.6 GHz desktop)

Intel's new high-end processor, used in mid-range to high-end desktops, is the first Intel chip with dual core technology.

AMD Athlon 64 X2 (speeds of up to 2.4 GHz desktop/2.4 GHz desknote/2.0 GHz mobile)

AMD's new high-end 64-bit processor, used in mid-range to high-end desktops and large (and battery hungry) laptops.

Intel's Core 2 Duo (speeds of up to 2.16 GHz desknote/2.16 GHz mobile)

Intel's mid-range to high-end dual core processor, available on both desktops and laptops.

Suggestions: ISC suggests Celeron D or Pentium D (533 MHz bus) processors for Value PCs, while suggesting Core 2 Duo or Athlon64 X2 processors for Performance PCs. Laptop suggestions range from Core Solos on the extreme low-end to Core 2 Duos on the high-end - almost all laptop users will be well served by the Core Duo or the Core 2 Duo.

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