If I am answering your question correctly, to find out what CPU you are using, just go to 'My Computer' and on the left side of the window, there should be a tab that says 'About My Computer' or something like that. That is just XP, i dont know about Vista or Windows 7. If your on mac go to the apple and click about this mac and it will tell you what is in your system.
I depends on your OS one way that works for most Microsoft is to click start-control panel-classic view for vista and 7-administrative tools-computer managment-device manager then drop down processors.
go to c:\programs\accessories\system tools\system information\hardware
Chipset and CPU define the type of memory.
cpu
cpu
System bus frequency and multiplier
It is a system of coded numbers that when read by the CPU control unit are interpreted as commands for the various operations it can perform. Each different type of CPU has a differently coded instruction set.
To determine whether a request is meant for the client CPU or the server.To determine whether a request is meant for the client CPU or the server
A CPU test or a "stress test" is where a computer is vigorously tested to find out how stable the computer is. It can determine the breaking points and safe usage limits of the computer, as well as how or why a computer system fails.
CPU operates from 166 MHz to more than 3 GHz system can operate from 133 MHz to 400 MHz. CPU is faster than the system bus
speed of ram, speed of cpu, how empty the hard disk drive is
psp emulators, (or any type of emulator, N64 Snes etc.) allows you to play that type of system on you CPU with the games you download.
phyiscally? or in the operating system? physically well it is in the case. to find it on the operating system you need to go onto "my computer" to find your CPU specifications. go to run then type in "DXDiag" press enter
chipset