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Pentium MMX (150) 16 mb 12.1 800x600 TN 7350DT 1998 Pentium MMX (166) 12.1 800x600 TN 7360DT 1997/11 Pentium MMX (200) 32 mb 12.1 800x600 TN 7360DMT 1997/11 Pentium MMX (200) 32 mb 12.1 800x600 TN 7370DT 1997/11 Pentium MMX (233) 32 12.1 1024x768 TN 7380DT Pentium MMX (266) 32 12.1 1024x768 TN 7380DMT 1998/01 Pentium MMX (266) 32 12.1 1024x768 TN
Logo from 1993 The latest standard badge design used by Intel to promote the Pentium brand. The Intel Pentium brand was a line of mainstream x86-architecture microprocessors from Intel. Processors branded Pentium Processor with MMX Technology (and referred to as Pentium MMX for brevity) are also listed here. It was replaced by the Intel ...
P5 (Pentium MMX) 6 233 350 nm 1999 P6 (Pentium III) 12 (15 with load & store/retire) 1400 250, 180, 130 nm 2000 NetBurst (Pentium 4) (Willamette) 20 unified with branch prediction 2000 180 nm 2002 NetBurst (Pentium 4) (Northwood, Gallatin) 3466 130 nm 2003 Pentium M (Banias, Dothan) Enhanced Pentium M (Yonah) 10 (12 with fetch/ retire) 2333
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 Pentium Pro: 52x P6: 1995–1998 150 MHz – 200 MHz Socket 8: 350 nm, 500 nm 29.2 W – 47 W 1 60 MHz, 66 MHz 16 KiB 256 KiB, 512 KiB, 1024 KiB N/A Pentium II: 52x Klamath Deschutes Tonga Dixon: 1997–1999 233 MHz – 450 MHz Slot 1 MMC-1 MMC-2 Mini-Cartridge: 250 nm, 350 nm 16.8 W – 38.2 W 1 66 MHz, 100 MHz 32KiB 256 KiB – 512 KiB N/A
[10] [11] The Pentium II was also the first P6-based CPU to implement the Intel MMX integer SIMD instruction set which had already been introduced on the Pentium MMX. [7] The Pentium II was a more consumer-oriented version of the Pentium Pro. It was cheaper to manufacture because of the separate, slower L2 cache memory. The improved 16-bit ...
Pentium II processor with MMX technology. MMX defines eight processor registers, named MM0 through MM7, and operations that operate on them.Each register is 64 bits wide and can be used to hold either 64-bit integers, or multiple smaller integers in a "packed" format: one instruction can then be applied to two 32-bit integers, four 16-bit integers, or eight 8-bit integers at once.
560 560E 560X 560Z CPU: Pentium 100, 120, 133MHz: Pentium 150, 166MHz: Pentium 200, 233MHz MMX: Pentium II Mobile 233, 300MHz : HDD: 2.1 GB: 2.1 GB: 2.1-4.0 GB: 4.0-6 ...