On Sat, 14 Jul 2007 11:34:11 -0400, "John"
<rds1226@sh163.net> wrote:
>I have two laptops. One is Toshiba Satellite 1905 s301 with Pentium 4 2.0G
>cpu, and the other one is hp pavilion 6108 with T1350 1.86G cpu.
>
>I guess that the T1350 1.86G is a Pentium Mobile cpu. I never know what the
>difference between those mobile cpus of Intel.
>
>Then which cpu is faster. 2.0G>1.86G, does this mean that the Pentium 4 is
>faster.
>
>But the Toshiba laptop was bought in 2002. If it is faster than a laptop
>built in 2006, is it still normal?
>
The HP is faster, but you could've used a benchmark to find
this out easily enough or a Google search for CPU benchmark
scores.
John wrote:
> I have two laptops. One is Toshiba Satellite 1905 s301 with Pentium 4 2.0G
> cpu, and the other one is hp pavilion 6108 with T1350 1.86G cpu.
>
> I guess that the T1350 1.86G is a Pentium Mobile cpu. I never know what the
> difference between those mobile cpus of Intel.
>
> Then which cpu is faster. 2.0G>1.86G, does this mean that the Pentium 4 is
> faster.
>
> But the Toshiba laptop was bought in 2002. If it is faster than a laptop
> built in 2006, is it still normal?
>
>
For a benchmark, you can try SuperPI. Download link is at the top.
Typically, you set it to "1 million digits". My P4 3.2GHz does
1 million digits in 44.1 seconds. The world's record is about 9 seconds.
Since SuperPI uses a chunk of system memory, it tests both CPU
performance and the memory as well. The Pentium Mobile should
have a shorter time in seconds, than the P4.
"John" <rds1226@sh163.net> wrote...
>I have two laptops. One is Toshiba Satellite 1905 s301 with Pentium 4 2.0G
>cpu, and the other one is hp pavilion 6108 with T1350 1.86G cpu.
>
> I guess that the T1350 1.86G is a Pentium Mobile cpu. I never know what the
> difference between those mobile cpus of Intel.
The P4M CPU was not a particularly good one; reports I read in the past said it
was not as good a performer as the P3M.
OTOH, the Pentium M that succeeded those earlier CPUs are much better
performers. They come in several voltages and varieties, but they share the
same Core architecture as the CoreDuo CPUs.
I am confused. Are there different types of Pentium Mobile CPUs?
Or are they just of different speed?
"John Weiss" <jrweiss98155nospamatnospamcomcastdotnospamnet> wrote in
message news:U4udnX2_UPjtCgTbnZ2dnUVZ_gadnZ2d@comcast.com. ..
> "John" <rds1226@sh163.net> wrote...
>>I have two laptops. One is Toshiba Satellite 1905 s301 with Pentium 4 2.0G
>>cpu, and the other one is hp pavilion 6108 with T1350 1.86G cpu.
>>
>> I guess that the T1350 1.86G is a Pentium Mobile cpu. I never know what
>> the difference between those mobile cpus of Intel.
>
> The P4M CPU was not a particularly good one; reports I read in the past
> said it was not as good a performer as the P3M.
>
> OTOH, the Pentium M that succeeded those earlier CPUs are much better
> performers. They come in several voltages and varieties, but they share
> the same Core architecture as the CoreDuo CPUs.
>
>
P3M, P4M, and P-M are all different CPUs. The P3M and P4M are very similar
technologies, but the P-M is an evolution later.
"John" <rds1226@sh163.net> wrote...
> Then what is a T1350 1.86G cpu?
>
> I am confused. Are there different types of Pentium Mobile CPUs?
> Or are they just of different speed?
> "John Weiss" wrote...
>> The P4M CPU was not a particularly good one; reports I read in the past said
>> it was not as good a performer as the P3M.
>>
>> OTOH, the Pentium M that succeeded those earlier CPUs are much better
>> performers. They come in several voltages and varieties, but they share the
>> same Core architecture as the CoreDuo CPUs.
I know there is P3M because there is only P3M corresponding to P3.
But from P4, I am confused. I never heard of P4M.
Which is faster P4M or Pentium M with a same frequency?
"John Weiss" <jrweiss98155nospamatnospamcomcastdotnospamnet> wrote in
message news:N4GdnRrV75vKIQfbnZ2dnUVZ_qq3nZ2d@comcast.com. ..
> http://www.intel.com/products/centrino/compare.htm
>
> http://www.intel.com/products/proces...t/coresolo.htm
>
> T1xxx appears to be a Pentium M or "Core Solo."
>
> P3M, P4M, and P-M are all different CPUs. The P3M and P4M are very
> similar technologies, but the P-M is an evolution later.
>
> "John" <rds1226@sh163.net> wrote...
>> Then what is a T1350 1.86G cpu?
>>
>> I am confused. Are there different types of Pentium Mobile CPUs?
>> Or are they just of different speed?
>
>> "John Weiss" wrote...
>>> The P4M CPU was not a particularly good one; reports I read in the past
>>> said it was not as good a performer as the P3M.
>>>
>>> OTOH, the Pentium M that succeeded those earlier CPUs are much better
>>> performers. They come in several voltages and varieties, but they share
>>> the same Core architecture as the CoreDuo CPUs.
>
>
Doesn't U Penn teach you how to do a bit of research?
"John" <rds1226@sh163.net> wrote...
>I know there is P3M because there is only P3M corresponding to P3.
>
> But from P4, I am confused. I never heard of P4M.
>
> Which is faster P4M or Pentium M with a same frequency?
>> "John" <rds1226@sh163.net> wrote...
>>> Then what is a T1350 1.86G cpu?
>>>
>>> I am confused. Are there different types of Pentium Mobile CPUs?
>>> Or are they just of different speed?
>>> "John Weiss" wrote...
>>>> The P4M CPU was not a particularly good one; reports I read in the past
>>>> said it was not as good a performer as the P3M.
>>>>
>>>> OTOH, the Pentium M that succeeded those earlier CPUs are much better
>>>> performers. They come in several voltages and varieties, but they share
>>>> the same Core architecture as the CoreDuo CPUs.