AMD Duron vs. Intel Celeron
DeadBugs writes: "With all the hype surrounding the new Athlon XP and P4 2.2 GHz, the more affordable processors have been ignored. Tech-Report has a great article comparing the new AMD Duron and Intel Celeron. Both are now running at 1.2 GHz and have upgraded cache. The new Duron contains XP technology, while the Celeron is a PIII Tulatin with a 100MHz bus and built on the .13 micron process."
From what I remember of the Intel roadmap around 1998, Intel was supposed to have come out with a 100Mhz Celeron chipset sometime in the year 2000. Obviously this didn't happen on time...
And in the small-end market, hasn't it always been the Duron's that beat the Celeron's, especially with AthlonFP technology... -dave
Who is this Anonymous Coward character, how does he post so much, and why is he always such a whore?
The Celeron is also crippled by the poor FPU that hasn't really changed since the Pentium II came out. The only reason why I would buy a Celeron-based computer is if heat and noise are not tolerated, beyond that, even a slower Athlon or the Duron would be the processor of choice (both for people on a budget or for people who crave speed).
Tom's Hardware did a review on this a couple of weeks ago: http://www.tomshardware.com/cpu/02q1/020103/index. html
As you can see, the Celeron is actually at 1300 MHz, not 1200. Funny thing is the Duron still beats it by a good deal.
Whatever ingnoring is, it sounds illegal. Especially if you do it to a product that you don't own.
Job? I don't have time to get a job! Who will sit around and bitch about being broke and unemployed then?
Unfortunately, AMD apparently isn't ready to move the Duron to a 266MHz bus just yet. That's really a pity, but AMD wants to differentiate between the Athlon and Duron
They're not ready because to put the Duron and Athlon at the same bus speed would make their performance levels nearly equal. With the hardware prefetch and SSE we've already seen the 1 gig duron keeping up with the 200mhz fsb 1 gig Athlons. To put the cheaper Duron at 266 would give little incentive to buy an Athlon of the same grade (save for the cache).
--------
It's OK to be social, just don't tell anyone about it.
covers even bright colors with only one coat!
Celeron is a PIII Tulatin with a 100MHz bus and built on the .13 micron process
By the way, that's "0.13 microns."
As my Nobel-Laureate physics lab professor used to say, "ALWAYS use leading zeros with decimal points; that way your readers can tell the difference between a fraction and fly shit."
Go ahead and mod me down, but I'm not a grammar nazi, I'm a math nazi!
My word processor was written by Stanford Professor Donald Knuth. Who wrote yours?
SIS has restored my faith in AMD. The ECS K75SA motherboard is only $64 after shipping and works with any Socketed Athlon/Duron cpu. It is fast and stable, accepts DDR and SDR, built in networking and sound(ok, AC'97 isn't that great), a real winner. You can build a 1GHz system and only pay $120 for the cpu, heatsink/fan, and mobo.
A decent review, I suppose.
I think it was a tad unfair to compare a Duron using DDR to a Celeron on PC100/133 (depends on the motherboard and how they set it up). They did acknowledge it directly when discussing the memory bandwidth (which showed the expected numbers, Duron was around 2x Celeron), but I think it shows only part of the picture (especially with DDR prices back up in the stratosphere compared to say, a month or two ago). This is one reason I take benchmarks with a grain of salt...it's very difficult to objectively compare AMD and Intel CPU's now due to the drastically different architectures.
The article also mentioned the Intel headspreaders...these should be reflexive on all processors. I can't count how many "Cracked core" thread's I've read on the [H]ardOCP forums...and a reasonable number of these guys are shall we say slightly above your average user.
My $0.02...
-Colin
diapers are perfectly acceptable if you can see them if they are Pampers do you like them
faster bus speed, faster instruction execution, faster floating point, there is now way it can't.
(This starts off as a bit offtopic, but I felt like posting this)
Price.
Yes, you get that 1.2 second advantage in Photoshop if you have a Pentium III 900, but I could care less if I have a Celeron over Pentium III.
It also goes for games too, like I care if Quake III Arena runs 20 frames faster than on a Celeron, all the computer has to do is meet 30 frames per second. The human eye is not fast enough to see 100 frames per second. (Yes I know video cards play a factor, but the processor does do a fair bit of work).
All I care about is if the processor can run applications at a decent speed.
Also, is it just me or does the name "Duron" not sound very catchy? "Pentium," "Celeron," and "Athlon" all have catchy names. Yet for some reason, "Duron" doesn't sound all that great and sounds like a processor from the waste bucket.
I know of a few people who own them and actually don't have anything negative to say about them.
take a .5mm mechanical pencil, and draw a trace over the L1 bridges on top of the processor. This unlocks the chip, and you can then go into the motherboard bios, and set it for 1000/266. Free upgrade, and your not even really overclocking anything either.
Lawyers, MBA's, RIAA? A jedi fears not these things!
Do these low cost cpu's matter anymore? Celerons do not stand for value.
In the mid 90's sure it was a huge cost difference $100 for that celery 300a@450mhz vs p2-p3 450 at about $500.
As of right now celeron ghz is about $58
( http://www.pricewatch.com )
AMD XP 1500 $107
Thats the battle, now I'll give you 3 guesses which is a better value.
If it's not too much trouble could someone set up a mirror or copy and post the article.
Thanks
-Glen
Sure, the Duron may have the edge on the Celeron in the 'Windows XP benchmarking exercise' but in the 'Naked vaseline wrestling exercise' the Celeron bitch-slapped the Duron until it wept like a girl.
So which has more power? As always, it depends on what you need it for. If it's high-performance 3D graphics you want, go with the Duron. But if you like drinking in rough bars, I'd stick with the Celeron.
Really? You use 10 million of stomach acid to clean your monitor? Good thing you're using a soft lint free cloth, then. It hurts less when you pull on the string to get the cloth out of your stomach, I guess.
If the duron comes with XP technology, does that mean there is a complementary holographic image of Bill Gates on the top of the cpu? Or does it mean you have to "activate" it and if you switch mobo's you have to call AMD to have it unlocked?
Winter 2010: With Glowing Hearts
That really impresses me. I mean, they could shrink the die size, or use SOI, or even borrow a cue from the Alpha and use SMT. But no, they went way beyond all the rumours and used XP Technology. I wonder if they had to license it from Microsoft?
Even Slashdot wants to hide some things
Intel is not advertising XP comaptibility of their Celeron.
Celerons do work really good with XP from my previous experience but they didn't post it on their compatibility list.
Celeron Compatibility: Fully compatible with an entire library of PC software based on operating systems such as MS-DOS*, Windows* 3.1, Windows for Workgroups* 3.11, Windows 98, Windows 95, OS/2*, UnixWare*, SCO UNIX*, Windows NT, Windows 2000, OPENSTEP*, and Sun Solaris*.
Toms posted an article a few weeks ago comparing the same. Pretty interesting article. BTW, the Celeron is at 1.3 GHz. Check it out.
I think my principles are reachin' an all time low
The other day I was working on a computer for a few extra $$ while job hunting. The motherboard was faulty and caused frequent lockups. (One of those "PC100" brand boards by PC Chips)Since he had a P-II 400 I knew there were no new slot1 boards around. So I planned on my old standby (read favorite and stable) Intel D815EEAL board. I go down to Frys and low and behold... They are sold out. So I ask the sales man. He said they are not getting any more. What am I to do? They had only one other 815 board with like 2 pci slots. I also looked and they no longer had ANY P-III's. They had plenty of celerons but the S370 boards were all mostly EL-Cheapo 65$-80$ boards that wouldn't be fit to scrape dog poo of my shoe.
We had just upgraded the ram on his computer and I made sure it was PC-133 just in case. So I had to have PC-133 support. So after my last horror of cracking and burning up a T-Bird Athlon.. I was reluctant to give my money to AMD. (I've had some AMD problems in the past w/ 486s and barbecued K6's) But being left with little choice, I decided to bite and get an EPOX KT266 board (EPOX is a real good yet underrated MFR) and pair it with a Duron 950.
The combo worked suprisingly well and... The speed was just amazing! (Even w/ PC-133 ram!) It blew the pants off the last system I built. A P-III 800B on an D815eeal board. Maybe I've been a little hard on AMD, but the Duron has restored quite a bit of my faith in them. The price/performance is just great.
So go ahead and buy one, they are worth it. AMD seems to be your best buy at least until the newer P4's combined w/ DDR come out.
A Duron 1.2GHZ costs $79, while a 1.2GHZ Athlon costs $72... someone explain to me why the Duron is the 'budget' CPU.
For the price of a 1200 MHz Duron, you can get a 1000 to 1100 MHz Athlon that will run rings around it. These "value" processors don't really look like much of a value to me.
As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
When you go down 200mhz to a still-respectable 800mhz, the price plumets down to $40ish... from a decent vendor. Then you get potential. You can build a $250 countertop pc. Which is exactly what I did...
:) ).
Add $50ish for the suprisingly nice ECS motherboard (for $50, it's a GREAT deal. it's nice on quality and features. i would gladly pay twice that price for the same board) and $10 for a heatsink (amd-approved, of course).
Add another $50 for a Geforce2MX. The MX isn't a horrible card, it is sufficent for running most games...
Add (whatever) for RAM... it's SOOO cheap now. I just dug up 256mb from my closet full-o-parts. You can get that for about $30 from crucial
Add about $30 for an AMD approved psu (i can't stress the approval more. it really makes a diffrence!)
Then i added a keyboard and mouse (i got a refurbished wireless keyboard and mouse for $25. most people can find a cheapo keyboard and mouse that is more than sufficent).
I used a hard drive from an existing pc. It's fine for my purposes.
Volia! For about $250, i have a NICE countertop pc, which is hooked to the hi-fi as a jukebox(hey, that's what it was advertised as when it was purchased... oh 20 years ago
Now, granted, I used some parts i already had, which isn't fair to the price factor. Take those off, and you go up to about $400 (case+ram+hdd). There are many people who can't afford a pc due to the astounding prices. To dell and friends, i say poo!
This says a lot about the beuracocracy behind dell and all the big pc makers. Once must wonder the profit margin dell is enjoying (remember their little deal with intel... surely they are sold chips at dirt cheap prices)?
-- If you try to fail and succeed, which have you done? - Uli's moose
Sounds like an oxymoron to me.. XP and technology?
I can see the future of hacking ..."my new cpu was cool untill some script kiddies hacked it and overclocked it."
Really, what is "XP" technology doing in a CPU? I remember when this was tried with "win"modems.. they were a REALLY BAAaaaDD idea. But then again, MS can talk companies into including their proprietary garbage.. money talks.
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= - The Celtic - =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
Have they really been ingnored? I was jis watin fer a gud ravew.
You know, if you look on pricewatch.com, the Duron is only $5-$10 cheaper than an Athlon thunderbird of the same clock speed. Some $20. Might be a good reason why they get ignored sometimes.
---- "Excuse me. Where's the children's gun section?"
Here in Oregon, we spell that "Tualatin", as in Tualatin River, Tualatin Valley, Tualatin Valley Highway, etc. (For several years now Intel has been using Oregon place names for their processors.)
'M' as in 'molar', not as in 'million'.
The celeron might be slower, but it beats the PII 400 I've used it to replace. I just upgraded to the celeron on my 3.5 year old Dell. $170 buys the chip and slotkit.
Because Intel is still producing inferior chips with slow bus speeds, I can play Black & White. Part of the fun of tech advances, is the way they pull up the rear, while dropping prices.
Cache Rules Everything Around Me
You can afford the extra five bucks. I think it is well worth it.
Actually, this brings up an important issue-- compiler technology, and the run-time libraries (RTL's) they use (in the case of C/C++, the standard libraries, in the case of Pascal/Delphi, the RTL and possibly parts of Borland's VCL/CLX). The problem, it seems to me, is that compiler authors don't seem to take advantage of architecture specific improvements like they used to (and as they should). Sure, some libraries/RTL's take advantage of it (and the compiler may have switches to emit optimized code), but if the standard libraries/RTL's are re-compiled (or even re-written) to take advantage of it, then it's all for nothing.
It seems to me that Intel has the right idea (the FPU is really useless if you know HOW to use SSE and SSE2 properly), and that if anything, it's poor software authors and poor compiler writers that are to blame for the lackluster performance of code on Intel's CPUs. It's saddening to me to see the optimization skills software engineers *used* to have back in the day diminishing year by year as the ability to right crappy code is justified by ever-faster CPU's. (Why spend the weeks or months needed to engineer everything to run properly now, when Intel/AMD will have a 'fix' for our sloppy code out in a few months?)
I wish authors such as Michael Abrash still released optimization guides for assembly language (or even just updated versions for C/C++ and assembler).. his 'Zen of Code Optimization' (ISBN: 1-883577-03-9 *or* FatBrain.com's description (out of print)) was probably the best investment *I* ever made.
All I know about Bush is I had a good job when Clinton was president.
Where are you getting your prices from? Pricewatch shows a different story...
a new processor licensed from Motorolla. In the vein of the Duron and Celeron, Apple has dubbed its chip the Dodecadon. It will feature a spherical chip package with one wing.
After a lukewarm reception, Apple changed the name to the "Celery", and sales went up 1400%.
(If you don't get the above [bad] joke, please "move along, nothing to see here!")
Vote monkeys into Congress. They are cheaper and more trustworthy.
Athlons may be only $5 more for the same speed, but Athlon XPs are not. The older T-Bird Athlons are slower than the new Durons. And the new Athlons run MUCH cooler. So you can pay $5 more for a 1.2ghz T-bird and get a slower CPU that runs a lot hotter.
I'm referring to the trends I observe on Pricewatch (for bottom of the barrel) and Crucial.com (for "premium.").
-Colin
How is this news? The Duron has be kicking the Celeron's tail end since the Duron's release. The Duron can usually keep up with a P3 of the same speed, or at least trail very closely behind. The fact that they are both over 1ghz is not new either, not to mention that the so-called advances for the Celeron trully haven't helped it much, as it's an aging architecture. Please people, save money, get a better product from the AMD processors. (I'd still prefer a XP over a P4 personally, I'm yet to see a P4 that didn't give me this feeling that everything for some reason loads slower, though benchmarks seem to say it can be faster in some cases...yet it's only slightly faster than a much lower clocked Athlon XP, see a problem here?)
Derek Greene
The problem with Athlon-esque CPUs is that the motherboards are still rather expensive (at least over here in Oz), thus although AMD CPUs are cheaper to purchse, you end up spending more on the motherboard anyway and the whole price advantage that the Duron has over the Celeron is negated. The price difference between the Athlon and Duron, last time I checked, was so small that the Duron doesn't really compete.
:-)
For this fact alone, if I had a choice between building a Duron box or a Celeron box, I'd choose to build an Athlon box instead
...this is getting out of hand
The new Celeron 1200mhz eludes me more than any product I've seen Intel release. Just recently I read www.tomshardware.com 's artice on celeron vs duron and although he doesn't touch on this subject at all... I can CLEARLY see in many of the benchmarks (sisoft cpu bench, as well as mp3 encoding speed) that the Celeron 1200 is indeed OUTPERFORMING the pentium 4 1400 and 1500mhz. Now is that silly? yes I think so. Do I find this terribly disturbing? yes. Why? Because enginners at intel seem to think higher MHZ is better than good cpu design. And Intels own marketing strategy is going to bite itself in the ass. Oops too late.
You wanna see a sweet dual processor system? Check out the World's First Prestonia benchmarks. 2 CPUs (1.8GHz) with 512KB of full-speed L2 cache, and functioning SMT. The BIOS reports it as 4 CPUs.
:)
The benchmarks speak for themselves. Zoom zoom.
You do realize who ECS is, right? You can get started with some info from these scheisters here.
:). They are unreliable garbage, IMHO.
:)
They are a distributor of PCChips, the same people who:
- Fake the speed of their motherboards
- Pirate their BIOSes
- Rewrote bioses to display fake cache amounts and glued black plastic squares to their board with bits of metal sticking out from them and etched SRAM looking part numbers onto em
- Create deceptively similar but not at all related to their brandname counterpart chipsets. VXpro, VX+, BXpro, etc. are all famous PCChips parts.
- Relabel chipsets that look/are too cheap with the above names
- Seem to be gaining a reputation on newsgroups for selling complete garbage motherboards (just look for "PCchips shit/junk/suck" on deja)
- Have an absolutely amazing number of aliases. Eurone, Houston Tech, ECS, Amptron, Protac, Aristo, Minstaple, Matsonic, Fugutech -- the list goes on and on.
- Don't label their boards properly
- Use huge jumper blocks to set memory type (no, not just 5 or 6, but jumper blocks the length of a DIMM slot!)
BTW: As a tech at a computer store I build systems with ECS motherboards (its what we sell -- no I won't say where I work
But AMD approved power supplies are a good idea. I don't know how many times I've seen cheap power supplies with the ratings simply stuck on them with an extra sticker.
I'd really reccomend swapping the board, though. Just a reccomendation. But if it is performing alright for you right now, well, stick with it. Occasionally some are actually built ok!
BTW: If you are using the board I am thinking of, its also "made" by amptron in red. Or blue, I forget which colour was for which company sometimes. With their most popular boards, by selecting the manufacturer you can select the colour. F-U-N
When Tom's Hardware Guide gave a solid rating to a PCChips board (I think its the K7S5A) I decided I'd never trust one of his reccomendations again. If you are going to rate boards you should at least do some homework on the company first!
geezus ... anyone else blink at that acronym and remember (T)he (H)umble (G)uys?
wow. i'm old.
... hi bingo
The average consumer would assume that the Pentium chips are much faster as Intel has branded a 'fancy' new 2.2 GHz chip. Even that AMD chips *model names* only reach to +1900. (about 1.63 GHz).
Almost hilariously, AMD doesn't have to get their chips running at a 2.2 GHz frequency to get nearly the same performance.
The same speed differences per frequency show up in the lower bus-speed chips (Duron / Celeron).
The average consumer is completely unaware of the closeness between speed of the chips of each company.
AMD chips are much better priced, and carry more value for their money. Stability is excellent, speed is unmatchable in identical frequency ranges. It has been this way for a couple years now.
Aside, AMD has likely changed their naming system to make their chips 'sound' competitive compared to Intel chips? (i.e. Athlon XP 1600+ sure sounds like 1600 MHz doesn't it!).
orgnine
Comment removed based on user account deletion
K7S5A's have a reputation for being cheap, fast and generally hard to overclock.
10 M means 10 molar. It is used to measure the strength of the acid. If I remember right 10 molar means that there are 10 moles or 60.2 x 10^23 (a real big number) of HCl for in every liter. But I could have forgotten something somewhere...
It is also entirely possible to get HCl without taking it from your stomach. I don't remember how you get it though (as in what kind of chemistry to use, you can always buy it).
Omnia vestra castrorum habetur nobis.
Look into the Scyld Beowulf. All slave nodes can run diskless, booting from a floppy or CD. They pull the base system from the master. So you can walk around with the install CD (which contains the node booter) and bring up your slaves one by one. Nice setup and easy to run.
That is unless you're doing distributed storage... Then you'll need the hard disks, unless you have a lot of RAM, heh.
"I have a cunning plan..."
They are indeed excellent motherboards. There is however two warnings I will make:
1.) If you have a crappy case it might not fit. I am rather sure that it is the largest size under the ATX standard. Cheap cases, especially those made by OEMs like Dell and HP, might not be able to fit it. Hell, I've seen cheap OEM cases that can't even fit a mid sized ATX motherboard.
2.) This isn't really specific to that motherboard but from what I hear people who are trying to make an inexpensive computer (or going for Athlon with many gigahertz and a Geforce 3 but trying to cut corners elsewhere) will buy this inexpensive motherboard and then a cheap crappy power supply that can't handle having . The result is that it doesn't work in various ways. I will admit that this happened to me. I had a cheap 250 W from my old computer and I figured I might as well at least try it with ECS k7s5a, Athlon 1.4, and Geforce 3 before I went and spent money on a new power supply. It actually worked for about a week and a half with no stability problems or anything, but after that I came home to find the computer that I had left on was now off with the smell of burnt insulation coming from it. I opened the power supply and at least 4 components inside had burnt up. So I purchased a nice powerful 350 Watt and now everything is good.
Omnia vestra castrorum habetur nobis.
What's really behind the price difference between the Athlon/Pentium and the Duron/Celeron? What is so much more expensive in the fabrication process of the "real" CPUs compared to their "value" counterparts? Actually, you'd think that the Durons/Celerons would be more expensive than the Athlons/Pentiums, since I presume that the first are made in smaller volumes. I'd also guess that the redesign of existing "real" CPUs into "value" versions would mean higher R&D costs than the common cranking-up of clock frequencies in the "real" CPUs.
Perhaps you can see that IANAHP (hardware person). I simply don't see a raison d'être for the "value" versions, other than for use in laptops.
Help savingAmigaOS and a free PowerPC market
SO what's the big difference between the two companies' products? Although I read the occasional article on arstechnica, I have to admit I don't know much about processors.
i ?i d=dar
Which would you recommend for gaming? I've always heard people say AMD is better price/performance for games, but it seems like intel is finally making progress with their new products.
what to do!? what do to...
http://www.alexchiu.com/affiliates/clickthru.cg
I feel there is lot of Hype on core clock speeds. With the Busses slowing down throughput. I see comparable results between 2 systems working on clock speed differences of 500 MHz.
/* The Code is misbehaving, It's not supposed to do that! */
The author points out that at 91 vs 86 dollars, the duron is better bang-for-your-buck. However, the duron uses DDR-SDRAM, while the Celeron uses good old cheap PC-100's. Cost vs Performance really needs to look at the entire package, not just the chips themselves.
if you discredit the importance of the cache size.
... you know 0 about cpu cache etc...
And I mean no disrespect, just honestly
The Intel Compiler isn't competition for MS VC++, it's a plugin. It just replaces the compiler and linker of VC++ with Intel's optimised one. It is well worth your money if you're oging to be doing serious development as it is just all around mroe efficient, even for Athlon chips.
Inaccurate moderation ... as usual.
The immediate parent should be moderated:
-1 Victim
The lumpy yet amusing SlaveTroll claims another.
CC
Actually, it is 0.13 m (micrometer). Micron has since long been deprecated in favour of micrometer, part of our beloved SI system of units.
This sig under construction. Please check back later.
Bigger cache = more silicon for the die = more cost due to lower yeilds. A larger area of silicon has to be "perfect" enough to build the "real" cpu, as opposed to a "value" one.
Apparently.
I said N/T dammit.
You must work damn hard to keep that CPU cool. Hope you don't fall off letting the Athlon fry itself like an egg :)
Hey, tRoll? 2000 just called and they want their joke back.
You would think that someone who wanted to be respected for writing a hardware review would at least try to remember the Voltage, Current, Resistance, and Power relationships that he or she learned in high school.
Your processor may only use a supply voltage of 1-2 V, but if you still need a heatsink and fan it's obviously using tens of watts of power.
Actually, one of the problems with modern processors is that power is going up in processors while supply voltage is going down. That means much more current. Around half of the pins on modern processors are for power and ground. You start to see wierd problems with metal migration on the power supply wires, ground bounce problems from wire inductance, and all sorts of other strange problems.
-- Erich
Slashdot reader since 1997
which costs $326 on pricwatch right now, given the fact that the athlon xp 1800+ whoops the p4 2ghz, the XP 2000 will beat the p4 2.2ghz, and the p4 2.2ghz costs $629 for the processor alone, plus double the ram cost, and more for a motherboard.
I'd rather have a XP 2000+ anyway.
"And we have seen and do testify that the Father sent the Son to be the Savior of the World"
1 John 4:14
i do not believe in benchmarks. they are not fair and inaccurate. systems being compared are not in equal specifications.
my other point is when you are using a celeron or a duron, do you feel any speed difference in using word processing, spreadsheet, presentation, e-mail, surfing? when running games, can you notice a 100fps from 95fps?
i am sure most will buy the faster cpu but there is not much difference with all the cpu unless you have specialized applications such as encoding, graphics rendering, and other professional applications.
so for a home user, a celeron 500 may do very well than a celeron 1.2ghz or a duron. just count the times the actual usage of your cpu, most of the time, it is idle.
Live your life each day as if it was your last.
I've heard that you can take a Tyan Tiger MP mobo and smack two Durons in it for a pretty killer, low-cost SMP rig, while the Celeron is SMP-locked, so this is not possible. Has anyone tried this, successfully?
"When the 0.13 micron chips come out, they will crush the Pentium 4. Right now the best Athlon is neck and neck with the best Pentium 4, and the Pentium 4 has the benefit of a 0.13 micron process (i.e. a much higher clock rate)."
Does the process really matter if they are "neck and neck"? If the best Athlon is as fast as the best P4, buy the damn Athlon.
-- Too lazy to get a lower UID.
>>> the
>> By the way, that's "0.13 microns."
> No, it's 0.13 micron.
One might argue that it's really "0.13-micron", but according to webster.commnet.edu, we may all be right.
I'm not a nazi, I'm just anal-retentive.
-- D.
but 10 moles == 60.2 x 10^23 (to be more precise 60.22 x 10^23 IIRC)
Durian is one of the weirdest foods in the entire world. It's like an urban legend for a lot of people ("Yeah, there's this fruit which smells like garbage, and tastes sort of like a garlic pudding ..."). Bad name for a child, just because of the smell factor. If not for that, would sound good for a son or daughter.
I've had it, once. I enjoyed the *experience* but don't exactly have a hankering for it as a result.
timothy
jrnl: http://tinyurl.com/c2l8yr / foes: http://tinyurl.com/ckjno5
No, wrong. 6.02 x 10^23 is the number of molecules in one mole.
Anyhow, my comment was a jab about the incorrect usage of SI. You only you use a number between 1 and 10, then your exponent.
So, in trying to correct me, you were wrong in your formatting, and you were wrong mathematically by an order of magnitude. I'm sure you are glad you posted AC so you look less stupid...
± 29 dB
So, basically sir/madam, you need to calm down and just take a very deep breath. Smell a flower and enjoy life. Otherwise, your pathetic hateful little existence is going to only hurt others. Next time you begin to post, why don't you sit back and break your fingers... then when you realize how much it hurts to type, you might actually save your posts for times that they are really wanted and needed.
you obviously did not drench your submission with enough liberal tripe. After all, even the FAQ mentions how the readers of submissions take into account the WAY it was written... and some say that our society is too shallow? Pah!
I'm an unashamed intel whore i know but i will be buying one of these 1.2 celerons... with the same cache as the old p3, you can overclock and get the equivalent of a 1.6 GHz p3. Thats not too bad, especially for less than $100! my mobo already supports tualatins (abit vh6-t) so it wont cost much... cheap gaming machine methinks
When is some Far Eastern manufacturer with
poor English (and marketing) skills going
to come out with a chip called the 'Moron'?
Tracy Johnson
Old fashioned text games hosted below:
http://empire.openmpe.com/
BT
You know, I really honestly believe that Slashdot should stop allowing Anonymous Coward posts. Now, granted, all I needed to do was change my threshold, but I keep it at zero because I do like to see the AC posts.
OK, now it's looking like I've contradicted myself, but here's the deal: if we disallowed AC posts, the ones who have anything intelligent to say would just get a username. That's good anyway, right?
Now the question may be: what about the "kewl d00d" that posted the message I'm applying too; do we really want these morons all being official "Slashdotters?" Well, we need some kind of system (perhaps working off e-mail address) that would forever ban you from Slashdot if you ever try to create an account with a username like 1337pImPdAdDyOWNZj00!!! or pHaT_gAmEr_H4X0R as I'm sure our friend just couldn't resist doing.
Anyway, here's the reason I posted these thoughts in the first place. I don't think Slashdot should allow posts from people who regularly say things like:
-Lawrence
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