Celeron is an marketing name for Intel's lower-cost CPUs from the Pentium family.

Intel has manufactured and sold Celeron versions of the Pentium II, Pentium III, Pentium 4, and Pentium-M CPUs.

Intel purposefully limits the performance of their Celeron processors to prevent them from competing with their higher-end Pentium and Xeon processors.

At the same time, the Intel Celeron processors are designed to compete against processors from AMD.

The original Celeron design was a poor performer due to the lack of L2 cache.

The next generation of the Celeron included 128KB of L2 cache which ran at the full clock speed of the CPU. This made the Celeron a strong competitor against Intel's own Pentium CPUs. The Pentium CPU's featured larger L2 caches, but they ran at only half the speed of the CPU.

Celeron

Current Celeron Processors

Intel's current Celeron processor is the Celeron D.

The Celeron D models feature a 533MHz Front Side Bus and a 256KB L2 cache.

Celeron Model CPU Speed
340 2.93GHz
335 2.80GHz
330 2.66GHz
325 2.53GHz
320 2.40GHz