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Willamette core only. Can accept some of Socket 478 CPU with an adapter Socket 495: 2000 Intel Celeron Intel Pentium III: Notebook PGA: 495 1.27 [3] 66–133 MHz Socket 603: 2001 Intel Xeon: Server PGA: 603 1.27 [4] 100–133 MHz 400–533 MT/s Socket 478/ Socket N: 2001 Intel Pentium 4 Intel Celeron Intel Pentium 4 EE Intel Pentium 4 M ...
rPGA 989 (as shown on the right) is a socket that can take Socket G1 (rPGA988A) or Socket G2 (rPGA988B) processors. Supported memory: DDR3 SoDIMM (1066-1333 MHz, Sandy Bridge); DDR3\DDR3L 1600 may work without DDR3L power optimisations and with 1333 MHz clock speed. DDR3 SoDIMM (1066-1600 MHz, Sandy Bridge Core i7-2720QM and faster [5]).
Socket FT6 Dual-channel LPDDR5: Athlon Gold 7220U Yes 2400 (3700 boost) 4 MB Ryzen 7020 4 Yes 2400–2800 (4100–4300) 4 MB Zen 3: November 2020: Vermeer Ryzen 5 (5600X), Ryzen 7 (5800X), Ryzen 9 (5900X, 5950X) 6/8/12/16 Yes 3400–3800 (4600–4900 boost) 16.0 GT/s PCIe 32 KB inst. 32 KB data per core 512 KB per core 32–64 MB (32 MB per CCD ...
In each generation, the highest-performing Core i7 processors use the same socket and QPI-based architecture as the medium-end Xeon processors of that generation, while lower-performing Core i7 processors use the same socket and PCIe/DMI/FDI architecture as the Core i5. "Core i7" is a successor to the Intel Core 2 brand.
LGA 1151, [1] also known as Socket H4, is a type of zero insertion force flip-chip land grid array (LGA) socket for Intel desktop processors which comes in two distinct versions: the first revision which supports both Intel's Skylake [2] and Kaby Lake CPUs, and the second revision which supports Coffee Lake CPUs exclusively.
Socket 7 is a physical and electrical specification for an x86-style CPU socket on a personal computer motherboard. It was released in June 1995. [ 1 ] The socket supersedes the earlier Socket 5 , and accepts P5 Pentium microprocessors manufactured by Intel , as well as compatibles made by Cyrix / IBM , AMD , IDT and others. [ 2 ]
Haswell is the codename for a processor microarchitecture developed by Intel as the "fourth-generation core" successor to the Ivy Bridge (which is a die shrink/tick of the Sandy Bridge microarchitecture). [1]
Before the Coffee Lake architecture, most Xeon and all desktop and mobile Core i3 and i7 supported hyper-threading while only dual-core mobile i5's supported it. Post Coffee Lake, increased core counts meant hyper-threading is not needed for Core i3, as it then replaced the i5 with four physical cores on the desktop platform. Core i7, on the ...