First post, by kanecvr
- Rank
- Oldbie
wrote:I still think the Northwood was the best generation of P4, the Prescotts ran too hot and the Willamettes were underwhelming performance-wise. If you could live without the SSE3, x86-64 support, and larger cache then the Northwood was almost always better performing because it didn't run quite as close to its thermal limits.
That said, the Pentium M still surprises me with how much fight it has. It still powers my daily-driver laptop, the 2GHz one I believe, and it handles Windows 7 like a champ. I'm sure if I bothered to replace the hard drive with something faster it would impress me even more, but it is in no way unsatisfactory except for when I try to queue up a YouTube video in the HTML5 codec. It doesn't like that very much at all, and I don't blame it one bit for that: it even likes to bind up my Phenom II. Give me the flash codec any day. Wow, never thought I'd say that.
... my test resuts differ. I have two Prescotts - a 3GHz and a 2.8GHz and a few Northwoods - two are 2.8 GHz. In floating point benchmarks (what interests me for games) the Prescott's 1MB of cache gives it an edge.
Besides, I like the over the top architecture of the Prescott and later Cedar Mill P4 CPUs - like early big V8 engines - lots of torque, not much horse power 😁 - it's the same reason I like the FX 82xx series from AMD, but those don't really get too hot (they do use loads of power tough) and are competitive but just not at the same clocks as an I7 (I am of course talking purely about FPU performance - in encoding / decoding and multimedia the i7's have a clear edge).