The AMD Athlon XP-M 3000+ was a mobile processor with 1 core, launched in March 2003. It is part of the Athlon XP lineup, using the Barton architecture with Socket A. Athlon XP-M 3000+ has 512 KB of L2 cache and operates at 2.2 GHz. AMD is making the Athlon XP-M 3000+ on a 130 nm production node using 63 million transistors. You may freely adjust the unlocked multiplier on Athlon XP-M 3000+, which simplifies overclocking greatly, as you can easily dial in any overclocking frequency. With a TDP of 72 W, the Athlon XP-M 3000+ consumes typical power levels for a modern PC. Many games will refuse to start on this processor due to the lack of the SSE2/SSE3/SSE4 instruction set.
This processor comes with an unlocked multiplier, allowing users to set the multiplier value higher than the shipped value, to facilitate better overclocking.