QUOTE (puntoMX @ Oct 30 2007, 05:43 PM)

*
Thanks for kicking the living death out of me here, I needed it
.hehe...not that I really meant to. I just thought it important to emphasize that he has a P4-M and not a P-M.
QUOTE (sween64 @ Oct 30 2007, 06:52 PM)

Are
these the only processors my chipset will support?
You
should be ok with one of those but we're not going to make any guarantees. It all depends on what support Acer put in the BIOS. Usually though, if it supports one C1 processor it'll support all of them (at the same bus speed). Honestly, I really don't see a reason why it wouldn't support the D1 revisions either.
QUOTE (sween64 @ Oct 30 2007, 09:00 PM)

QUOTE (puntoMX @ Oct 31 2007, 04:32 AM)

There is NO upgrade for your laptop.
How do you know this? Are you referring to my BIOS.
If you had the Pentium M like he originally thought, then he would've been correct. However, since you have a Pentium 4-M then you
should have some upgrade options available. Again, we're not giving you any guarantees. To be completely honest, if you can even find a P4-M you'll probably spend more on the CPU than the laptop is worth.
If you really want to give it a decent upgrade, give it some more RAM (assuming it has the default 256MB in it now, you really should get some more even if you get the CPU upgraded). You can get an additional boost by putting a 7200RPM hard drive in it. But, if you use it on battery a lot be warned that a 7200RPM drive will run the battery down faster.
QUOTE (sween64 @ Oct 30 2007, 09:00 PM)

As far as I could tell the different versions are just, they'll still be compatible. How can I tell before I buy a certain CPU if it is compatible with my BIOS?
Unfortunately, I couldn't find any information on Acer's site that would provide a way to tell. However, I didn't look for very long though.