VirtualLarry
No Lifer
- Aug 25, 2001
- 56,587
- 10,225
- 126
Pentium D? Low powered? Are we in the same universe? Anyone have any idea what the TDP is for these chips?It's a relatively low powered chip too.
Pentium D? Low powered? Are we in the same universe? Anyone have any idea what the TDP is for these chips?It's a relatively low powered chip too.
That technology is about 4 years old. Keep it, use it, but don't put (much) more money into it. Windows 7 and RAM seem like reasonable upgrades that you can reuse.I just was given a Dell E510 that has a Pentium D 2.8GHz processor. Is this processor considered fast or is it not worth putting any money into this computer. I wanted to install Windows 7 and some more ram, but not sure that its worth it if you say that the above processor is too obsolete.
Thanks
Well it's dual core and at one time was fastest chip around.
Heya,
It's a dualcore and it's got a decent clock. It's a relatively low powered chip too. You could use it to make a HTPC or server easily. It can also power a Web/Casual machine for normal casual use like web surfing, documentation, photos, etc. I wouldn't use it for a modern gaming machine though.
Very best,
As much of a fail the Pentium 4 was, Pentium D's really hold their own in older dual-threaded games. I used to get 20-30fps on TF2 w/ a P4 2.8ghz HT when the game was single threaded. I can imagine the P4 doing TF2 @ 40-60fps.
I was on the s939 bandwagon though (several 3500+'s, X2 4200+) and those were some fast processors for the money.
If you have the P4 laying around, it's good enough for everything. It is still pretty slow when it comes to flash and encoding.
I have a friend with this processor and he can't play 1080p vids smoothly. Is it really that bad?
I still remember the video of someone frying an egg ontop of a Netburst Pentium 4
No they don't. Pentium 4's are garbage. There's a reason why Intel went back to the P3 and reworked it instead of using the P4
I dont think a P-D 2.8Ghz was considered fast when it was released...certainly not "fast" for the last 4 years.
No, it wasn't fast, but it was the value chip of the timeOr rather, the Pentium D 805 was. AMD had the price premium with the Athlon 64 X2.
When it came out :
http://www.neoseeker.com/Articles/Hardware/Reviews/pentium-d-820/
"We reviewed the Athlon 64 X2 4200+ here just a few days ago. With the Pentium D 820 priced at less than half of what AMD's entry-level dual-core part is priced at, Intel could very well be responsible for initiating the dual-core push into the consumer home."
If you read through the benchmarks, the Pentium D was actually faster than the Athlon X2's in a number of benchmarks, particularly for encoding and general office apps. Gaming was solidly favoring the X2 though. But for half the price, what can you say? At the time of the Pentium D 800s hitting the market in 1H '05, this was the AMD pricelist :
Athlon 64 X2 4200+ 2.2 GHz 512 KB $537
Athlon 64 X2 4400+ 2.2 GHz 1 MB $581
Athlon 64 X2 4600+ 2.4 GHz 512 KB $803
Athlon 64 X2 4800+ 2.4 GHz 1 MB $1001
OUCH!
Anyway, either a Pentium D or Athlon X2 is still useful today, if someone already has the chip and mobo/ram/etc, as long it does what they need in a reasonable manner, they're okay. 'Fast' wouldn't apply, and if someone has the $ for even a budget build (Athlon II X2, C2D E5000/7000, etc .. a $50-$60 chip will blow the doors off the top-of-the-line from 4 years ago, and after overclocking will even game pretty well), I like to suggest that as a good option.
HAHAHAHHAHAHAH At those prices
Yeah didn't that suck?I remember at the time I was just like 'Dammit, I'm sticking with my trusty single-core until this nonsense is sorted out!'. Prices really didn't tumble to earth until shortly after C2D dropped, then the ~$100ish Athlon X2 became a reality at long last.
