The baby Duron hits big brother speeds

The Duron has been slowly but surely increasing in clock speed over time, and it has finally hit 900MHz.  No matter how you try and present it, the Duron is much more powerful than any other entry-level CPU that we have come across. 

The Celeron's day is long gone, even with its 100MHz FSB the peak performance of the Celeron is nowhere near that of the Duron.  Pay attention to our use of the word peak in the previous sentence because as we noticed in previous reviews, when paired up with either the SiS 730S or VIA KM133 chipset, the Duron loses much of its performance advantage over the Celeron.  So if you're buying a pre-built system with integrated video, the [100MHz FSB] Celeron 800 might actually be a better option since its integrated video platform (i810E/815E) is much more mature, however when building your own system we already know what the better option is.

At 900MHz the Duron is relatively unchanged from any previous incarnations of the core.  As usual, below you will find our comparison table of specifications.

CPU Specification Comparison
AMD Duron
AMD Athlon
Intel Pentium 4
Intel Pentium III
Celeron
Core
Spitfire
Thunderbird
Willamette
Coppermine
Coppermine 128
Clock Speed
600 - 900MHz
750 - 1333MHz
1.3GHz - 1.5GHz
500 - 1000MHz
533 - 800MHz
L1 Cache
128KB
8KB Data
32KB
L2 Cache
64KB
256KB
256KB
256KB
128KB
L2 Cache speed
Core Clock
L2 Cache bus
64-bit
256-bit
System Bus
100MHz DDR EV6
100/133MHz DDR EV6
100MHz quad-pumped GTL+
100/133MHz GTL+
Interface
Socket-462 (Socket-A)
Socket-423
Slot-1/Socket-370
Socket-370
Manufacturing
Process
0.18-micron
Die Size
100mm^2
120mm^2
217mm^2
106mm^2
106mm^2
Transistor Count
25 million
37 million
42 million
28 million
28 million
An updated Roadmap The Test
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