Intel Celeron
2008
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![]() Intel Celeron 430 180GHz Boxed Processor BX80557430 US $131.97
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![]() Intel 18GHz 512K 1066MHz CeleronSLAGH US $129.00
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![]() Intel 18GHz 512K 800MHz CeleronSL9XN US $129.00
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![]() IBM Intel Celeron 27GHz 128K 400FSB CPU New 13R8947 US $126.00
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![]() Intel Celeron 733 128 66 Malay SL4P7 pulled lot of 10 US $124.99
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![]() SL584 Intel CPU Processor Celeron 800Mhz 100Mhz 128K Mic US $122.95
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![]() Intel Celeron 27 GHz 400MHz 128K RK80532RC068128 SL77S US $119.00
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![]() Intel Celeron 550 2 GHz BX80537550 Processor US $119.00
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![]() New Intel Celeron 266 Ghz Processor US $119.00
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![]() CELERON 1800 Intel CPU Processor Proc Cel 18Ghz US $115.95
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![]() SLBZY Intel CPU Processor Celeron Dc P4600 2Ghz US $115.95
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![]() F3377 69201 HP Compaq CPU Processor Procb Intel Mobile Celeron US $115.95
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![]() 100067 INTEL CPU Processor Proc 22Ghz Celeron Ema US $115.95
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![]() CELERON 2200 INTEL CPU Processor Proc Cel 22Ghz S478 40 US $115.95
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![]() INTEL MOBILE CELERON SL6QH 2GHZ 256KB RH80532NC041256 US $115.00
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![]() 13GHZ INTEL CELERON M Socket 478 Notebook CPU US $99.00
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![]() New Intel Celeron 110 Ghz Processor US $99.00
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![]() New Intel Celeron 213 Ghz Processor US $99.00
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![]() Intel Celeron 260 GHz 128K 400MHz BX80532RC2600B SL6W5 US $97.00
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![]() INTEL SL7DM CELERON 28GHZ 256K 533MHZ 478PIN CPU US $95.00
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![]() INTEL SL7TU CELERON D 253GHZ 256KB CPU JM80547RE061CN US $95.00
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![]() Brand New Sealed Box Intel 346GHz Celeron D LGA775 CPU US $89.95 |
![]() INTEL Celeron E3400 Processor US $89.49
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![]() Intel Celeron 10 GHz 128K 100Mhz BX80526F1000128 SL5XT US $89.00
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![]() Intel Celeron 170Ghz 256KB 400Mhz CPU SL6VG US $88.40
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![]() Intel 83 12013 Intel Celeron Processor E3300 25ghz 800mhz FSB 1MB L2 US $87.99
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![]() Intel Celeron Mobile 530 173GHz S478 CPU Retail NEW US $86.99
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![]() Intel Celeron 250 GHz 128K 400MHz BX80532RC2500B SL72B US $85.00
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![]() INTEL CELERON D 336 288GHz 533FSB 256K CACHE CPU US $84.99
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![]() Intel Celeron Mobile 520 16GHz S478 Tray CPU NEW US $84.99
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![]() OEM Intel Celeron T3500 SLGJV 21GHz 800M Socket P CPU US $82.99
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![]() Intel Celeron 440 1M 186GHz 533MHz BX80538440 SL9KW US $82.00
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![]() Intel Celeron M 430 173GHz 533MHz 1M BX80538430 SL92F US $82.00
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![]() Intel Celeron M 530 173GHz 533MHz 1M BX80537530 SL9VA US $82.00
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![]() New Intel Celeron Mobile T3000 18Gz 1M 800Mz SLGMY CPU US $80.00
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![]() Intel Celeron 440 Mobile CPU 186 1M 533 SL9KW US $80.00
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![]() Intel Celeron M T3300 20G SLGJW SLG92 Socket P OEM CPU US $79.99
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![]() Brand New Sealed Box Intel 333G Celeron D LGA775 CPU US $79.95 |
![]() Intel Celeron 850MHZ 128K 100MHZ RB80526RY850128 SL54Q US $79.00
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![]() INTEL RK80546RE067256 CELERON D 330 266GHZ S 478 CPU US $79.00
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Lenovo Ideapad S10 Review
Build and Design
The design of the IdeaPad S10 is unsurprisingly similar to other netbooks we've seen in recent months, but Lenovo has managed to include a few pleasant surprises. The exterior is covered in white "pearl-like" plastics with a slight glossy finish. The interior keyboard and palmrest surfaces are covered with matte white plastics with reasonable durability and only a minor bit of flex around the palmrests when you press firmly on those surfaces.
What first appears to be a giant beefy hinge for the 10-inch display is actually the 3-cell battery with a small hinge on either side of the tiny laptop. Overall, the look is quite nice, but the white plastics do give this netbook a slightly "toy like" appearance. When I took the S10 with me and was using it in public with my 2-year-old daughter nearby several other parents asked me if the S10 was a toy laptop for my daughter. That is unfortunate since, as we are about to mention, the S10 is a remarkably capable ultraportable laptop.
The build quality of the IdeaPad S10 battery is extremely solid for a subnotebook of this size and weight. The construction is mostly plastic but all of the plastics feel strong enough to handle being tossed around inside a bookbag.
In terms of upgradeability, the S10 lenovo s10 battery is much easier to upgrade than many netbooks currently on the market. Some of the netbooks we've seen to date require complex disassembly in order for you to get to the storage drive, system RAM, or wireless cards. Even worse, some other netbooks have slots for upgrades but no connections on the motherboard so it is impossible to upgrade them. This is not the case with the S10.
Keyboard and Touchpad
Most low-priced, full-size notebooks currently on the market feature poorly built keyboards that show significant flex/bounce when typing pressure is applied. Thankfully, most netbooks have remarkably firm keyboards due to the fact that the chassis is so small there isn't much empty space inside the notebook for the keyboard to flex or bounce.
The keyboard on the IdeaPad S10 is less cramped than what we've seen on most 7-inch and 8.9-inch netbooks, but the S10 keyboard is still extremely compact. Most touch typists will probably need some time to figure out proper finger placement on the keyboard in order to avoid making typos. Again, this is nothing new for netbooks, which usually require you to use a "hunt and peck" style of typing rather than traditional touch typing methods. Bottom line, this keyboard isn't designed to be used as a primary/main computer. For users who are considering the S10 as their "main computer" in their home or office, a full-size external keyboard and external mouse are recommended.
The touchpad design, while smaller than a traditional laptop touchpad, is surprisingly nice for a budget netbook. The touchpad in our review unit was a Synaptics touchpad with excellent sensitivity, responsiveness, and smooth tracking. The touchpad buttons are located in the correct position and have nice, deep, well-cushioned presses with a satisfying "click" when pressed. A nice addition to the touchpad was support for Synaptics multi-touch gestures which allow you to do things such as zoom in or zoom out simply by "pinching" or "spreading" the touchpad with your fingertips.
Display
The matte 10.2" WSVGA (1024x600) AntiGlare TFT display on the S10 is nice and vibrant with rich colors and good contrast. The white levels are very clear and the matte surface prevents glare and reflections which help make the screen easier to read outdoors under bright sunlight.
Horizontal viewing angles are good, so you and a friend won't have trouble watching a movie on the 8.9-inch screen at the same time. Vertical viewing angles are acceptable, but colors do tend to become darker and slightly inverted when viewed from below.
Ports and Features
Port selection was pretty impressive on the S10 compared to other netbooks, with the standout features being an ExpressCard slot for additional expansion and built-in Bluetooth for using an external mouse and keyboard without needing to sacrifice one or more of the two USB ports.
In fact, if there isn't much to complain about here other than the fact that the S10 has only two USB ports. However, if we had to choose between a third USB port or an ExpressCard slot and Bluetooth we will gladly sacrifice the third USB port. Here is a quick tour of what you get:
Front: No ports, just indicator lights and the speakers.
Performance and Benchmarks
This Intel Atom based netbook won't be breaking any speed records, but it performed more than adequately for normal activities. Windows startup took less than 30 seconds and internet browsing, word processing, and even photo editing tasks were downright "snappy." While the 3D graphics benchmark numbers aren't particularly impressive, it's important to keep in mind that netbooks are not designed for playing computer games. The S10 and similar netbooks are mobile internet portals and productivity tools for getting some quick work done without needing to carry a giant laptop.
PCMark05 measures overall system performance (higher scores mean better performance):
Notebook PCMark05 Score
Lenovo IdeaPad S10 (1.60GHz Intel Atom, Intel GMA 950) 1,446 PCMarks
Acer Aspire One (1.60GHz Intel Atom, Intel GMA 950) 1,555 PCMarks
ASUS Eee PC 901 (1.60GHz Intel Atom) 746 PCMarks
MSI Wind (1.60GHz Intel Atom) N/A
ASUS Eee PC 900 (900MHz Intel Celeron M ULV)
1,172 PCMarks
HP 2133 Mini-Note (1.6GHz VIA C7-M ULV) 801 PCMarks
HTC Shift (800MHz Intel A110) 891 PCMarks
ASUS Eee PC 4G (630MHz Intel Celeron M ULV) 908 PCMarks
ASUS Eee PC 4G (900MHz Intel Celeron M ULV) 1,132 PCMarks
Everex CloudBook (1.2GHz VIA C7-M ULV)
612 PCMarks
Sony VAIO TZ (1.20GHz Intel Core 2 Duo U7600) 2,446 PCMarks
Fujitsu LifeBook P7230 (1.2GHz Intel Core Solo U1400) 1,152 PCMarks
Sony VAIO VGN-G11XN/B (1.33GHz Core Solo U1500) 1,554 PCMarks
Toshiba Portege R500 (1.2GHz Intel Core 2 Duo U7600) 1,839 PCMarks
wPrime processor comparison results (lower scores mean better performance):
Notebook / CPU wPrime 32M time
Lenovo IdeaPad S10 (Intel Atom @ 1.60GHz) 127.172 seconds
Acer Aspire One (Intel Atom @ 1.60GHz) 125.812 seconds
ASUS Eee PC 901 (Intel Atom @ 1.60GHz)
123.437 seconds
MSI Wind (Intel Atom @ 1.60GHz)
124.656 seconds
ASUS Eee PC 900 (Intel Celeron M ULV @ 900MHz)
203.734 seconds
HP 2133 Mini-Note (Via CV7-M ULV @ 1.6GHz) 168.697 seconds
ASUS Eee PC 4G (Intel Celeron M ULV @ 630MHz) 289.156 seconds
ASUS Eee PC 4G (Intel Celeron M ULV @ 900MHz) 200.968 seconds
Everex CloudBook (VIA C7-M ULV @ 1.2GHz) 248.705 seconds
Fujitsu U810 Tablet PC (Intel A110 @ 800MHz)
209.980 seconds
Sony VAIO VGN-G11XN/B (Core Solo U1500 @ 1.33GHz) 124.581 seconds
Sony VAIO TZ (Core 2 Duo U7600 @ 1.2GHz) 76.240 seconds
Dell Inspiron 2650 (Pentium 4 Mobile @ 1.6GHz) 231.714 seconds
3DMark06 comparison results:
Notebook 3DMark06 Score
Lenovo IdeaPad S10 (1.60GHz Intel Atom, Intel GMA 950) N/A
Acer Aspire One (1.60GHz Intel Atom, Intel GMA 950)
122 3DMarks
Sony VAIO TZ (1.20GHz Core 2 Duo U7600, Intel GMA 950) 122 3DMarks
HP dv2500t (2.0GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7300, NVIDIA GeForce Go 8400M GS 128MB) 1,055 3DMarks
Sony VAIO FZ (2.0GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7300, Intel X3100) 532 3DMarks
HP dv6000t (2.16 GHz Intel T7400, NVIDA GeForce Go 7400) 827 3DMarks
3DMark03 Graphics Performance Benchmark (higher scores indicate better performance):
Notebook 3DMark03 Results
Lenovo IdeaPad S10 (1.60GHz Intel Atom, Intel GMA 950) 569 3DMarks
Acer Aspire One (1.60GHz Intel Atom, Intel GMA 950)
751 3DMarks
MSI Wind (1.6GHz Intel Atom, Intel GMA 950) 589 3DMarks
Lenovo ThinkPad T60 (2.16GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T4400, ATI X1400 128MB) 4,622 3DMarks
Speakers and Audio
The speakers on the IdeaPad S10 are reasonably impressive for a budget netbook. While the two tiny stereo speakers located on the front edge of the netbook produce good volume levels with minimal distortion and acceptable range, it's worth mentioning the somewhat odd placement.
Since the speakers are located on the front edge of the notebook the sound isn't being directed up and toward the user when the S10 is used as a laptop. In fact, our staff usually refers to laptop speakers with this type of placement as "crotch speakers" because the speakers are directing sound to your waist rather than your ears. Given the compact design of the S10 there weren't many other places for the speakers to go, but we'd like to see a different speaker location on next year's model.
The headphone jack on the S10 works well with the three different brands of earphones I used during the test. No static or other noise was noticed through the jack besides imperfections in the audio source itself.
Heat and Noise
As we continue to see in our labs, nearly all of the Intel Atom-based netbooks produce a reasonable amount of heat while running. The IdeaPad S10 remained on par with the competition in this regard. Even under normal conditions such as surfing the web, typing documents, or downloading email attachments, exterior temperatures peaked above 100 degrees Fahrenheit after more than 25 minutes of use. Granted, this level of heat isn't horrible by any means, but it might be a little uncomfortable on your lap after an hour.
The hottest spot on this netbook was the area around the hard drive and RAM. The external temperature readings below (listed in degrees Fahrenheit) were recorded while browsing the Web and running two HDTune tests in a row after approximately 30 minutes of use
In terms of noise, our review unit of the S10 remained quiet during most of the testing period ... except during graphics benchmarks. When the relatively weak integrated graphics were stressed during our review the internal cooling fan kicked into high gear. The fan noise wasn't horrible by any means, but it would be loud enough to get a teacher's attention in a quiet classroom. Again, this only happened when stressing the S10's graphics, so it shouldn't be an issue for casual web browsing.
Battery
Under normal use, backlight at 100 percent and using wireless for web browsing and watching several streaming videos at 75 percent volume, the S10 managed to deliver three hours and 43 minutes of battery life. This is similar to what we've seen from Atom-based netbooks with 3-cell batteries, so there isn't much to complain about here. However, as we've said in the past when reviewing other netbooks, these tiny laptops would make excellent mobile companions if they just had an option for a 6-cell or 8-cell battery for all-day use. In any case, lowering the screen brightness and turning off the wireless card should provide enough battery life for prolonged use with the 3-cell battery.
About the Author
Pc No Longer Quick?
Ahh...Remember that first day you introduced your pc dwelling, plugged every thing in, it was a phenomenal site, it was quick, internet pages loaded rapidly and packages launched inside seconds or faster. But after just a few months or weeks issues began to decelerate, and also you assume oh man what a piece of *@&* this thing only lasted a month. Let's take a look at what happened.
Disk Drive Muddle
What it's possible you'll not have realized is that in all that point you had been surfing the online and downloading packages putting in, and uninstalling software program, is that in all that time junk has been build up on your laborious drive, momentary internet information, software that you simply tried but didn't like, but by no means bothered to uninstall, emails from family and friends, which are sitting in your inbox and despatched items. All that junk is slowing down your computer.
While you’re onerous drive becomes cluttered it begins to slow down. Your pc performance is degraded substantially. The extra information you have got stored on your hard drive the more they get scattered and fragmented, which in turn slows down how briskly programs reply to your clicks. Take into consideration your laborious drive as a huge submitting cupboard, when all the files are neatly organized and labeled, it is straightforward to find what you're in search of, however take that very same filing cabinet and dump it all around the ground, it effectively take longer to find that sure file or folder that you just were looking for. A computer systems hard drive is the same way, as recordsdata develop into fragmented your pc takes more time to gather the correct recordsdata and execute your commands.
In addition the more files you have fragmented the less house on your hard drive your laptop has, resulting in less digital memory. That open space or unused space on the onerous drive is used as virtual memory by your computer, if in case you have restricted free disk space for information swapping your computer will become sluggish and slow to reply to commands, so hold your arduous drive clear and remove or uninstall any applications or information that you just don’t need and you will note a marked distinction in the way your laptop performs.
There are 5 major factors that contribute to a computer systems performance
1. The type of processor you might have in your computer. Not all processors are created equal. Price range model or discount model processors such because the Intel Celeron or the AMD Duron are decrease end processors. If you'd like a high performance pc stay away from the decrease finish processors.
2. Along with processors sort comes with the utmost out there cache in a processor. The big cache a CPU has the less time it needs to access the computer memory.
3. Front facet bus, once again the larger or quicker a pc front measurement bus is the higher a pc will perform. The front side bus is what carries all the information between the CPU and all of the gadgets on board the computer systems motherboard.
4. Hard Drive, as soon as once more it comes down to hurry, sometimes most dwelling PC’s may have both a 5800rpm onerous drive or a 7200rpm laborious drive. The sooner the hard drives spins the faster the CPU can entry data on the exhausting drive.
5. And eventually memory. The standard and efficiency of laptop memory or RAM has improve significantly the previous couple of years. DDR RAM set in channels of the computers mother board has considerably increased the pace and efficiency of in the present day’s computers. With that mentioned, the extra reminiscence you've the better your laptop will perform. Nonetheless there is a level where too much memory becomes just a waste of money. If you are a gamer you'll be able to most likely never have an excessive amount of reminiscence, however for those who use your pc for net browsing and e mail, 256-512MB is loads good on a Windows XP machine.
small tablet pc, harmon kardon computer speakers, cheap computer monitor
What does the D stand for in the Intel® Celeron® D Processor?
I use Intel® Celeron® D Processor that fits into LGA Socket 775 on my Motherboard. I cant understand what the D Stands for. Does it stand for Deltin or something? The same applies to the Intel® Pentium® D...
I went to the Intel Website, it didn't say anything on what the D Stands for.
the Celeron D was released well before the Dual core so sadly the 1st two answer are incorrect.
The D signifies the stepping version of the processor, in the earlier version they never highlighted the version "letter" but there are Celeron A1, B0,B1, B2 and C0, C1 and C2 as well as FPA and M and D0 and D1 and more.
MSC Embedded : MSC Embedded Inc. Delivers Cost-Efficient COM Express Module With 32nm Celeron CPU (Market Wire)
SAN BRUNO, CA (MARKET WIRE) MSC Embedded Inc., manufacturer of highly
integrated standard board level products and customer specific boards and
systems, today announced the high-end MSC CXB-6S COM Express(TM) module family
-- based on the second generation of Intel(R) Core(TM) processors. This module
will be offered with i3, i5 and i7 CPUs with two or four cores or with a cost-
efficient Celeron(R) variant. The COM Express module also offers a growth path
to future CPU technologies and can provide highly embedded solutions for high
performance platforms.
Toshiba Satellite A135-S2246 Intel Celeron M 430 1.73GHz


US $538.00


































































































