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Release date sSpec number Part number(s) Base Max Turbo Standard power: Pentium Gold G7400: 2 (4) 3.7 GHz — 2 × 1.25 MB 6 MB UHD 710: 300–1350 MHz 46 W — LGA 1700: DMI 4.0 ×8: January 2022 SRL66 (H0) CM8071504651605 BX80715G7400 Standard power, embedded: Pentium Gold G7400E: 2 (4) 3.6 GHz — 2 × 1.25 MB 6 MB UHD 710 300–1350 MHz 46 ...
All models support: MMX; ... Release date Release price Pentium II 233: 233 MHz 512 KB: 66 MT/s 3.5× 2.8 V 34.8 W Slot 1; May 7, 1997 $636 Pentium II 266:
In October 1996, the Pentium MMX [7] was introduced, complementing the same basic microarchitecture of the original Pentium with the MMX instruction set, larger caches, and some other enhancements. Intel discontinued the P5 Pentium processors (sold as a cheaper product since the release of the Pentium II in 1997) in early 2000 in favor of the ...
Intel released Pentium MMX, 166 and 200 MHz versions. Its MMX instruction set is designed to increase performance when running multimedia applications. May 7 Intel releases the Pentium II processor, 233, 266, and 300 MHz versions. It has a larger on-chip cache and expanded instruction set. May 11
Pentium II processor with MMX technology, SECC cartridge. The Pentium II [2] is a brand of sixth-generation Intel x86 microprocessors based on the P6 microarchitecture, introduced on May 7, 1997. It combined the P6 microarchitecture seen on the Pentium Pro with the MMX instruction set of the Pentium MMX.
Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information. ... Pentium/Pentium MMX; ... Release date Klamath: 0.35 μm: 233–300 MHz ...
ThinkPad 600 - First model shipped, featured either a Pentium MMX at 233 MHz or a Pentium II at 233, 266 or 300 MHz. This model had the option of either a 12.1" SVGA TFT display, a 13.0" XGA HPA display, or a 13.3" XGA TFT display, and shipped with an external floppy drive, a built-in CD-ROM drive, and a choice of a 3.2 GB, 4.0 GB, or a 5.1 GB hard drive.
This is a list of Intel Pentium M processors. They are all single-core 32-bit CPUs codenamed Banias and Dothan , and targeted at the consumer market of mobile computers. Mobile processors