386SX wrote:
Thank, interesting. I wasn't expecting the GPU to be like that considering based on the Powervr subsystem. I've seen it still support pixel shading anyway and I read also about drivers problems with linux.
Intel is notorious for abysmal GPU performance and support, the last time this showed was with the trainwreck that was the last win10 upgrade where the Intel GPU driver was the source of one set of issues. Considering their track record in that area I find their intention to make proper gaming GPUs quite hilarious.
386SX wrote:
I found this Intel board D2500HN with one PCI slot and up to 4GB of DDR3 ram and I was thinking with a picopsu power supply it would run well as light pc.
It should be fine for office work and light browsing. If you want to watch online videos, you better hope whatever GPU you can find will have decent hardware decoding, because the CPU won't be able to do it sufficiently
386SX wrote:
Also it seems it should be one of the few cpu not affected by newer bugs found on almost every cpu.
pretty much correct. It is an in order CPU without speculative execution, that means no spectre/meltdown vulnarability. Coincidentally that is also the reason why it is that slow.
386SX wrote:
Thank. I always found Atom processor to be better than most thought even when there was only the N270 with the external chipset.
I have a netbook with one of those and a friend had a 2000 series one. Funnily enough, you could actually moderately overclock the GPU in the separate chipset with a modded driver and doing so made the GPU significantly faster than that of the newer ones. Not that the overclock made it good, about FX5200 like performance IIRC
386SX wrote:
Considering SSE3 features, low power request etc it wasn't a bad Raspberry light-desktop-replacement alternative.
intel thought so too and made something like that with the Galileo platform in 2013. Not many people agreed however so Intel canned it in 2017
386SX wrote:
I was thinking testing it against the P4 Prescott cause it's the only desktop pc I've built right now but the P4 is quite a beast even now for such an old cpu anyway. Most modern kernel and light GUI and it's impressive. I find interesting that such old socket got an SS3/HT cpu so fast. Too bad they didn't make a 65nm version.
SSE3 was developed for the Prescott and it has a 65nm version in the cedar mill core. But I assume you are referring to the socket 478 and that one had to go IIRC because the P4 got so crazy with power requirements that they had to spread the power over more pins. Socket 478 simply couldn't reliably deliver enough power to get the higher performance out of the P4 cores that intel needed because at that time they were quite badly beaten by AMDs Athlon 64.