There are other factors that could be making the machine slow. What are the model numbers, and specs of the different components in the computer. As HSM said, the article you linked has to do with TDP (Total Distributed Power)? Has nothing at all to do with speed, or what each core does with the speed. An I-3 dual core with the same clock speed will pretty handily beat a cd2 of the same clock frequency because of improvements to the design of the cpu, it does more with less. Run some benchmarking software, futermark makes a free one available, then compare it to other computers with the same spec, if you are more than a few degrees out of whack, you need to investigate why. Don't get hung up on clock cycles, it's what those cycles can do that matter. Look at the quad core I-7's (first gen) They could be more than 400-600 mhz slower that c2d at the same time, but they would crush the c2d, especially in multi-threaded software benchmarks. Besides what are you changing to, and from what? Also remember, that there are not many c2d, or cdQ chips still being made, Socket 775 is a dead socket.