I copy from Anand's review of the first P4Celeron@1,7Ghz:
"The new Celeron core is based on a 128KB L2 version of the original Willamette core that the Pentium 4 debuted with in November of 2000. Unlike previous-generation Celerons, the Willamette-128 core is no different architecturally than the Pentium 4's old Willamette core. The cache organization and mapping algorithms are still the same, the only difference is that the Celeron core is only outfitted with a 128KB L2 cache instead of the 256KB cache present on the original Pentium 4........
......For information on the NetBurst architecture behind the Celeron take a look at our one page explanation of its strengths and weaknesses"
So everyone assumes that the existing Celeron line (Wilammette or Northwood core) is built upon the Intel NetBurst microarchitecture.....
In addition we all know that sharing the same Northwood core i.e. doesn't mean spontaneously, that the cpus follow the same microarchitecture, right?
The confusion starts from a closer look in Intel's site that clearly states for every Celeron cpu up to date that it follows the old P6 architecture with some minor improvements taken from the NetBurst like the 400Mhz bus.
Please check the following links:
About P4's Netburst
About the Celey's P6 structure
that are exactly correpondent to each other in the site's structure, referring to the same stuff for each processor.
So, are we in front of a deeper explanation for the Celey's poor performance to all respective Pentium4s aside the simple "less L2 cache" issue or am I somewhere seriously mistaken?
Eager to all explanations and the much desired right answer...!
"The new Celeron core is based on a 128KB L2 version of the original Willamette core that the Pentium 4 debuted with in November of 2000. Unlike previous-generation Celerons, the Willamette-128 core is no different architecturally than the Pentium 4's old Willamette core. The cache organization and mapping algorithms are still the same, the only difference is that the Celeron core is only outfitted with a 128KB L2 cache instead of the 256KB cache present on the original Pentium 4........
......For information on the NetBurst architecture behind the Celeron take a look at our one page explanation of its strengths and weaknesses"
So everyone assumes that the existing Celeron line (Wilammette or Northwood core) is built upon the Intel NetBurst microarchitecture.....
In addition we all know that sharing the same Northwood core i.e. doesn't mean spontaneously, that the cpus follow the same microarchitecture, right?
The confusion starts from a closer look in Intel's site that clearly states for every Celeron cpu up to date that it follows the old P6 architecture with some minor improvements taken from the NetBurst like the 400Mhz bus.
Please check the following links:
About P4's Netburst
About the Celey's P6 structure
that are exactly correpondent to each other in the site's structure, referring to the same stuff for each processor.
So, are we in front of a deeper explanation for the Celey's poor performance to all respective Pentium4s aside the simple "less L2 cache" issue or am I somewhere seriously mistaken?
Eager to all explanations and the much desired right answer...!
