Monday, December 8th 2008
First Dual-Core Celeron Mobile CPUs Out
Intel has introduced its first set of mobile dual-core CPUs under the Celeron M branding. There are two models up for sale: T1700 and T1600, clocked at 1.83 GHz and 1.66 GHz respectively. These processors, based on the Core micro-architecture, have a shared L2 cache of 1 MB. These chips have a front-side bus speed of 667 MHz. Both these processors are derived from the 65nm silicon fabrication process, and come with rated TDP of 35W. The T1700 and T1600 are priced at US $86 and $80 respectively (in 1000 unit tray quantities), and are intended to be value offerings towards a segment of notebooks.
Source:
TechConnect Magazine
9 Comments on First Dual-Core Celeron Mobile CPUs Out
NAS is great for a ready to go fileserver, but adding additional services or software is limited/difficult/time consuming.
A single Atom system is possibly a bit underpowered if the mini-server is hit with two or more demands simultaneously.
Dual Atom looks like a good performance fit at a great price. Mainboard AND CPU for EUR 110, BUT, nobody seems to stock them.
Leaving the Core 2 mobile, which is by far the most versatile due to performance, but is a bit pricey due to the expensive CPUs. However, the dual core celerons are very interesting at these prices. Cool enough for passive cooling. Cheap enough to be competitive. Powerful enough to provide flexibility to the system.
Hmm. Just might do it :pimp: