Tuter
Said..
The latest one processor in Pentium Series that I have seen is the
Intel's New Pentium M CPU
No need for fans. Performance is great for games. Easily overclocked. But Expensive and Suitable motherboards are rare and expensive. Computer is virtually silent (apart from graphics card, fan and power fan) as fans don't kick in unless you stress the processor, and then they only come on as fast as is needed.
Intel Quad-core & Dual core
Intel® Core™2 Extreme QX6700 (8MB L2 Cache, 2.66GHz, 1066 FSB).It has four cores in the chip. It’s very fast and expensive also. Its current price is $1200. And Intel® dual Core™2 Extreme X6800 (4MB L2 Cache, 2.93GHz, 1066 FSB).
And the others are
Pentium 4 670
Logical successor to the Pentium 4 6xx series, one of its closest representatives is the previously reviewed Pentium 4 660. Thus, there is nothing special about it: the same core architecture (Prescott-2M) as in the Pentium 4 660, the same bus clock (800MHz in terms of bandwidth) and the L2 Cache size (2MB).
Pentium D 820
Lowest CPU in the series of multi-core desktop "non-extreme" processors from Intel. The key difference between the Pentium D and the Pentium XE, Pentium D has two physical cores, but it doesn't support Hyper-Threading. Besides, the Pentium D 820 operates at the lowest clock among the entire series of Prescott- like CPUs: 2.8 GHz. wholesale prices for Pentium D 820/830/840 currently amount to $241/316/530.
Athlon 64 FX-57
The renowned successor to Athlon 64 FX-55 acquired a new 90nm San Diego core with an improved memory controller and SSE3 support. It's the first Athlon 64 FX manufactured by the 90nm process technology supporting SSE3. From the users' point of view, the new Athlon 64 FX is no different from the previous model: it is installed into the same CPU socket as the previous Athlon 64 FX-55 and makes no additional requirements to a motherboard.