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IA-64 (Intel Itanium architecture) is the instruction set architecture (ISA) of the discontinued Itanium family of 64-bit Intel microprocessors. The basic ISA specification originated at Hewlett-Packard (HP), and was subsequently implemented by Intel in collaboration with HP. The first Itanium processor, codenamed Merced, was released in 2001.
Under the influence of Microsoft, Intel responded by implementing AMD's x86-64 instruction set architecture instead of IA-64 in its Xeon microprocessors in 2004, resulting in a new industry-wide de facto standard. [60] In 2003 Intel released a new Itanium 2 family member, codenamed Madison, initially with up to 1.5 GHz frequency and 6 MB of L3 ...
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The reference to "EFI" in instruction set is technically incorrect. EFI is a specification that governs a replacement for system BIOS it applies to any architecture, not IPF in particular. The code that supplements an IPF processor is call the PAL/SAL for Processor Abstraction Layer/System Abstraction Layer.
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