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It's very simple, they are all distinguished by the number of pins of the CPU. socket478, socket775 are all Intel's.
At present, the mainstream is socket775 interface.
As for Socket7, it is on the AMD platform. Now there are 7543939 and AM2 and so on.
But performance and interface are not 100% compatible. For example, the performance of P4 with socket 478 interface is much better than that of Socket 775.
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The higher the number in the back, the better.
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These are the number of pins under the processor, which is the CPU. There are a lot of pins or contacts under the CPU, which are used to coordinate with the motherboard and transmit data.
Socket7 is not very familiar, it seems that the processors of P3 are socket7 standard socket478 means that there are 478 pins under the CPU, which supports the highest P4, and the maximum level 2 cache supports 512KB
Socket775 means that there are 775 contacts under the CPU, which is the standard interface of the new P4, PD, and Core2Duo, and the L2 cache supports up to 4MB
The best right now is 775
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The LGA775 is an inverted pin, which means that there are 775 pins on the CPU plug of the motherboard.
Socket 478 means that there are 478 pins on the underside of the CPU.
The two CPUs and motherboards cannot be used universally, unless an adapter card is used. Do you think the CPU of the 478 can be put into the motherboard of the 775?
At present, Intel is vigorously developing the 775, and has been developing it for quite some time, and it is foreseeable that the 775 is more promising than the 478.
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775 is this good, you are not afraid of breaking the needle, and when you take it, you will not be so worried. When it can, it is still much more advanced than the 478, after all, it is still the current dual-core interface. The 775 interface does not necessarily support HT, such as P4506, CD331, CD336, and dual-core PD820, 830, etc. do not support HT, and 478 does not necessarily support HT, for example, and other series all support HT, and Nalu and their front-end buses are 800M
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Each represents the number of pins, one is 478 and the other is 775
However, the 775 does not have a needle and is a point of contact.
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There are some differences, more pins mean more bandwidth and more stable power supply.
The maximum bandwidth of Socket 478 is only 800MHz, and the bandwidth of LGA 775 has reached 1333MHz
Moreover, Socket 478 is a pin CPU, which has a certain risk of pin breakage, and the density limit is relatively low. The LGA 775 uses contacts with bent pins that are fixed to the sockets of the motherboard, which has less risk of breakage and is electrically more electrically capable of achieving higher densities.
Simply put, 775 is an improvement, a necessary improvement to meet the needs of more high-end CPUs, but there is no so-called good or bad, the same 478 interface has P4 and Celeron, and the same 775 interface has dual cores and quad cores. But they are all changed to meet the needs of the CPU replacement.
Some of my own experience ......
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The Socket 775 interface is a new generation of interfaces since the advent of PD, and it is generally better than the original interface because it is a dual-core CPU
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The 775 interface and the 478 interface look different! I can't even get on the cup! Have time to see for yourself! It's a technology, but now the 775 is also obsolete.
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Socket 775 is better than Socket 478, including the new Coolry 2 architecture of the CPU is 775 pins, 478 pins in the P4 generation is basically over.
On the 3rd floor, you said that the 775 is outdated, so how many stitches do you use now? Khan died...
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Intel starts with CD 326 and P4 506, both 775-pin (but not dual-core) 775-pin CPUs support new features such as EM64T technology, PCI Express, and DDR2.
And compared with the 478-pin CPU, it has the advantage of low noise.
The specific performance depends on the specific model.
Of course, now 775 stitches of buckle meat performance.
No CPU with 478 pins can match that.
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Socket 775 direct dual-core.
Socket 478 does not support dual-core.
775 good, of course.
This is the most practical.
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It's just the difference between the old and new specifications, and it depends on the CPU
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Pin number 478 is the Ceyan 4 and Pentium 4 series.
845 starts to 865 supported range.
The 775 was supported by the Pentium D Seyan D.
915--965 board support.
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That's the characteristics of the motherboard chip North Bridge chip, not that the motherboard can be plugged into 2 CPUs with different pins at the same time, and the pins are different, how can it be plugged in.
Your motherboard, for example, the PT894, Northbridge Chip features: Micron-made desktop chipset supports Inter Celeron; celeron d;p4;P4EE Single CPU, Socket Interface Support for Hyper-Threading FSB: 400; 533;800;1066 RAM:
ddr;DDR2 memory transfer rate: DDR400; DDR2 533 Memory Module: 4 Up to 4GB RAM Dual-channel support ECC check PCE-E X16 does not support multiple graphics cards No integrated graphics card.
South bridges that can be matched: VT8237, VT8237R, VT8251
VT8237 (VT8237R) features: ATA133 2 pcs integrated AC97 sound card (support RAID: SATA RAID 0,1,0 1,JBOD) No PCE-E channel 10 100M (10 100 1000M) PCI 6pc.
That is to say, the northbridge chip of this motherboard can support 478-pin and 775-pin CPU, depending on how the motherboard chooses the CPU socket.
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478 775 This is the standard of the CPU interface, which is generally set by the manufacturer of the CPU, if you want the CPU to work, the interface on the motherboard must meet the corresponding standards, there is no motherboard that supports 478 and 775 at the same time, 478 and 775 are the number of pins of the CPU, although the CPU of 775 does not have pins, but there are also 775 contacts.
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No. 478 and 775 represent the type of interface.
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This is the number of pins in the Intel chipset, the 478 is the older ones that fit the Celeron 4 and Pentium 4E, and the 775 is suitable for the current Celeron D, Celeron, Ben D, and Buckle Meat series processors.
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is the number of pins, and there are two descriptions of CPUs that can support both types of pins
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Yes refers to the number of pins in the CPU!
It cannot be mixed.
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Yes is the number of pins.
The 775 is more advanced.
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Socket 478 is the interface used by P4 part of the P4 part of the Northwood core Prescott core P4, with a total of 478 pins;
Socket 775 is the interface used by Prescott core P4, there are no pins, only metal contacts, and its pins are in the socket T socket (which can be easily damaged), which can theoretically stabilize the main frequency of the CPU at the 10GHz level.
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