It was designed as 64 bit Tejas. It was designed to fly with 5-7GHz and 90 nanometer process. But it was found to be faulty in application. P5 required more power consumption and exhaust heat. So it marked as a failure and abandoned.
But it will soon prepare to release with 64 bit and will have 2MB plus of level to catch.
If satisfied, give thanks or you can share your findings.
There is no such thing as a Pentium 5. That would be a type of processor, except that Intel stopped naming them Pentium before the Pentium 5 came out.
Nobody, since there is no Pentium 5 processor.
I'd say yes but It may be slower and may crash at times. The pentium 4 processor is faster than the Pentium 3 processor so using the pentium 3 processor made for something that is faster than it's self will have it's drawbacks and may have complications.
Since the Pentium 5 does not exist, it's history is yet to be written.
No. No processor is, or ever has been, marketed as a "Pentium 5."
There is no Pentium 5 processor. The mainstream (non-budget) Pentium line ends with the Pentium D, which is essentially a dual-core Pentium 4. The Core Solo, Core Duo, Core 2 Duo, and Core 2 Quad all have a very different architecture from the Pentium 4.
The Pentium brand has been relegated to low-cost / budget processors. Creating a processor called the "Pentium 5" would confuse consumers, who now expect a Pentium to be a cheaper processor, while the name would imply that it was a flagship successor to the Pentium 4.
The first Pentium Is required a voltage of 5 volts.
None, other than that you can get a Pentium I computer for about $5.
Pentium Duo Quad, Pentium core duo, Pentium D, Xeon, Itanium, Pentium M, Pentium 4, Celeron, Pentium 3, Pentium 2, Pentium Pro, 486, 386, 286.
There are version of Intel Pentium one through four as well as Intel Pentium Pro, Intel Pentium D, Intel Pentium M, Pentium (2009), and Pentium Duel Core.
The Socket 4 Pentium processor from the early 1990's had 273 pins the socket 5 had 320.