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The latest standard badge design used by Intel to promote the Celeron brand. The Celeron was a family of microprocessors from Intel targeted at the low-end consumer market. . CPUs in the Celeron brand have used designs from sixth- to eighth-generation CPU microarchitectur
800 MHz, 1066 MHz, 2.5GT/s, 5 GT/s 64 KiB per core 2x256 KiB – 2 MiB 0 KiB – 3 MiB Intel Core: Txxxx Lxxxx Uxxxx Yonah: 2006–2008 1.06 GHz – 2.33 GHz Socket M: 65 nm 5.5 W – 49 W 1 or 2 533 MHz, 667 MHz 64 KiB per core 2 MiB N/A Intel Core 2: Uxxxx Lxxxx Exxxx Txxxx P7xxx Xxxxx Qxxxx QXxxxx Allendale Conroe Merom Penryn Kentsfield ...
The latest badge promoting the Intel Core branding. The following is a list of Intel Core processors.This includes Intel's original Core (Solo/Duo) mobile series based on the Enhanced Pentium M microarchitecture, as well as its Core 2- (Solo/Duo/Quad/Extreme), Core i3-, Core i5-, Core i7-, Core i9-, Core M- (m3/m5/m7/m9), Core 3-, Core 5-, and Core 7- Core 9-, branded processors.
Intel 5 Series is a computing architecture introduced in 2008 that improves the efficiency and balances the use of communication channels in the motherboard. The architecture consists primarily of a central processing unit (CPU) (connected to the graphics card and memory) and a single chipset (connected to motherboard components).
Core 2 Quad Q6600 and Q6700, Core 2 Extreme QX6700, QX6800, and QX6850, and the Xeon 3200 series. Has two dual-core dies in a single package for a total of four cores. Part of the 65 nm Conroe family. Reference unknown. 2005 Kevet CPU Massively multi-core CPU based on mini-cores. Cancelled. [27] A place in Ventura County, California. 2006 ...
Core 2 also introduced a quad-core performance variant to the single- and dual-core chips, branded Core 2 Quad, as well as an enthusiast variant, Core 2 Extreme. All three chips are manufactured at a 65 nm lithography , and in 2008, a 45 nm lithography and support front side bus speeds ranging from 533 MT/s to 1.6 GT/s.
Conroe is the code name for many Intel processors sold as Core 2 Duo, Xeon, Pentium Dual-Core and Celeron.It was the first desktop processor to be based on the Core microarchitecture, replacing the NetBurst microarchitecture based Cedar Mill processor.
The Celeron E3000 series, starting with E3200 and E3300, was released in August 2009, featuring the Wolfdale-3M core used in Pentium Dual-Core E5000, Pentium E6000 and Core 2 Duo E7000 series. The main difference to Allendale-based Celeron processors is the support for Intel VT-x and increased performance due to the double L2 Cache of 1 MB.