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To: KeithDust2000 who wrote (169562)8/23/2005 1:22:05 AM
From: PetzRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 275872
 
re: Pentium M is currently available up to 2.26 Ghz.
DELL Inspiron Notebooks
XPS Gen 2 Intel® Pentium M 760 (2GHz) processor, upgradeable up to 2.13 GHz/533 FSB ($255 more than 2 GHz)
9300 up to 2 GHz/533 FSB ($400 more than 1.6 GHz)
700m up to 2 GHz/400 FSB
DELL Latitude Notebooks
D810 Up to Intel® Pentium® M Processor 770 (2.13 GHz, 2MB L2 Cache)
D610 Up to Intel® Pentium® M Processor 760 (2.00 GHz w/533MHz FSB)
5 other Latitude Models: up to 1.6, 1.73 and 2.0 GHz
DELL Precision Workstations
M70 Up to Intel® Pentium® M Processor 770 (2.13 GHz, 2MB L2 Cache)
M20 Up to Intel® Pentium® M Processor 770 (2.13 GHz, 2MB L2 Cache)

DELL's not selling it, it doesn't exist. (A price of $698-$702 might have something to do with that.)

Petz



To: KeithDust2000 who wrote (169562)8/23/2005 8:05:01 AM
From: Dan3Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 275872
 
Re: Pentium M is currently available up to 2.26 Ghz.

That's not good news for Intel.

Dothan is a purpose designed notebook part in which some serious compromises were made to save power. It has 1/4 the register space, isn't 64-bit, and has had its floating point performance crippled to reduce power use.

It's rated at 27w "typical" at 2.26ghz.

The Turion is a "no compromise" part with 4 times the power hungry register space, is a true 64-bit part, and has a full power (in both senses of the word) floating point unit.

It's rated at 25w "typical" at 2.2ghz.

Both 90nm parts.

Intel has said that it had to drop 64-bit capabilities from Dothan's faminly to save power:
One of the key differences between the chips is that Yonah will not include 64-bit processing. Mooly Eden, vice president of Intel's mobility group, has said that adding that functionality boosts power consumption.
news.zdnet.com

Dothan also has a power saving, but limited, I/O capability. The power saving compromises in Dothan lead to some serious performance limitations - and it still don't save any power compared to Turion:
investorshub.com