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The NetBurst microarchitecture, [1] [2] called P68 inside Intel, was the successor to the P6 microarchitecture in the x86 family of central processing units (CPUs) made by Intel. The first CPU to use this architecture was the Willamette-core Pentium 4 , released on November 20, 2000 and the first of the Pentium 4 CPUs; all subsequent Pentium 4 ...
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 130, 90, 65 nm 2004 NetBurst (Pentium 4, Pentium D) 31 unified with branch prediction 3800 90, 65 nm 2006
Based on NetBurst microarchitecture; All models support: MMX, SSE, SSE2, Hyper-Threading; All models support dual-processor configurations; Models with no suffix or the A suffix use Socket 603 and a 400 MT/s FSB while models with the B suffix use Socket 604 and a 533 MT/s FSB. Die size: 146 mm²; Steppings: B0, C1, D1, M0
Intel NetBurst 2000 20 2-way simultaneous multithreading (Hyper-threading), Rapid Execution Engine, Execution Trace Cache, quad-pumped Front-Side Bus, Hyper-pipelined Technology, superscalar, out-of order NetBurst 2002 20 2-way simultaneous multithreading NetBurst 2004 31 2-way simultaneous multithreading
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This is a list of Intel Pentium D processors, based on the NetBurst architecture and targeted at the consumer market. Two generations were released, using the Smithfield and Presler cores and branded as 8xx- and 9xx-series respectively, as well as Pentium Extreme Edition 840, 955, and 965.
Same as Dothan except with a 533 MHz NetBurst-style system bus and 27 W TDP; Variants 1.60 GHz (Pentium M 730) 1.73 GHz (Pentium M 740) 1.86 GHz (Pentium M 750) 2.00 GHz (Pentium M 760) 2.13 GHz (Pentium M 770) 2.26 GHz (Pentium M 780) Stealey 0.09 μm process technology Introduced Q2 2007; 512 KB L2, 3 W TDP; Variants 600 MHz (A100)
Released as the Dual-Core Xeon 5000-series, Dempsey is a NetBurst microarchitecture processor produced using a 65 nm process, and is virtually identical to Intel's "Presler" Pentium Extreme Edition, except for the addition of SMP support, which lets Dempsey operate in dual-processor systems. Dempsey ranges between 2.50 GHz and 3.73 GHz (model ...