if you cant afford that or w/e and have to use your laptop then overclocking your laptop is the cheapest way to up your processor speed (its free) but i doubt your bios even allows overclocking. laptops are very hard to upgrade besides the RAM and hard drive and im not sure a processor upgrade would be worth the money if you were even able to do it. If you really want to upgrade something you may want to consider a Solid State Disk to replace your hard drive. They are expensive and dont have a lot of space but they are faster than hard drives and that could be part of your problem. Also some of your lags could be more from your gpu than your cpu. thats why im not sure a cpu upgrade would help a whole lot.
If you still are convinced you need a processor upgrade i dont really know what to tell you or what kind you should get. i dont know a whole lot about mobile processors. if you want high performance gaming you really just need to build a desktop.
Or you could get a ps3 or xbox360 if just want to play cod4...
hope this helpsChanging laptop processors for gaming?You cannot change the processor in any type of laptop. The problem is the space and heat constraints... Overclocking is a very bad idea as well for the same reason. This is why if you wana game, get a desktop.Changing laptop processors for gaming?the problem is you are trying to game on a system that was not designed for today's games. COD4 on high settings will cause lag on many systems. You dint state which processor you have in your laptop at all. Also you did not mention the OS...which i am assuming you have the resource hog called VISTA.
Higher frequency isn't always better. A somewhat slower processor with a bigger cache will beat out a high frequency processor with low cache. But as i mentioned before you never specified which Turion 64 X2 processor you have (Should be TL-60 or something like that)
You can change out processors in laptops...not sure where the first poster found their information at...but you can do so as long as you find one to match your motherboard.
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