Carlos S. M. wrote:Around my Willamette P4s, i found this interesting model, unlike all my other Socket 478 Willamettes, this one has the big logo which is only common in early models i think
There a pic of that CPU along with another P4 of the same clock and S-Spec, but the other small logo.
For some reason this thread made me laugh because of the whole Pokémon Go thing going on (gotta catch 'em all!).
I also have one of those with the 'big logo'. I literally just inventoried my CPUs in the last few days and this is what I've got, P4-wise:
SL5VH (Willamette) 1.6GHz/400/256/1.75V
SL6DV (Northwood) 2.4GHz/533/512/1.525V
SL6QB (Northwood) 2.8GHz/533/512/1.525V
SL7EY (Northwood) 2.8GHz/400/512/1.55V
SL6PE (Northwood) 2.667GHz/533/512/1.525V
SL6CJ (Northwood-M) 1.8GHz/400/512/1.3V
A fairly modest selection. I also haven't included any Pentium D models like someone else said. I have to admit, I don't love the P4. The Willamette was actually my main CPU for many years and it was always behind the times. I do feel more fondly for it than the PII, though, which I never had back in the day (went straight from 486DX4 to a Coppermine). In fact it's the only CPU I've run more than one generation of (I moved up to a 3.2GHz Northwood later on as a stop-gap, I think).
So, no, I don't have a big P4 collection. I have 10x Pentium-class CPUs but three of these are 133s. I have 9 486-class CPUs, which makes them my largest collection of one generation (not including 5x86).
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