It subsequently became apparent that even for the Celeron the Tualatin would be no more than a stopgap, only taking the range to 1.5GHz. At that point it became apparent that the plan was for the Pentium 4 Willamette core to move to the value … [Read more...]
Celeron Tualatin
The first Celeron based on Intel's 0.13-micron Tualatin core debuted at the beginning of 2002 at 1.2GHz. Given that the Tualatin's future in the mainstream desktop arena had been all but completely undermined by the Pentium 4 by the time of its … [Read more...]
Celeron Coppermine
In the spring of 2000 the packaging picture became even more complicated with the announcement of the first Celeron processors derived from Intel's 0.18-micron Pentium III Coppermine core. These were produced using yet another form factor - … [Read more...]
Celeron Mendocino
Starting with the 300A, all Celerons have come equipped with 128KB of on-die Level 2 cache running at full CPU speed and communicating externally via a 66MHz bus, making them far more capable than their sluggish predecessors. Somewhat … [Read more...]
Celeron Covington
The first Celerons (codenamed Covington) were essentially a Pentium IIs manufactured without any Level 2 cache at all. Although clocked at 266 or 300MHz - substantially higher than the old Pentium MMX - the cacheless Celerons were a good deal … [Read more...]
Celeron D
Intel's competitiveness in the value chip arena was given a considerable boost in mid-2004, with the Celeron's transition to the company's 90nm Prescott core. As though in recognition of the fact, the new processors were marketed under the … [Read more...]