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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 microarchitectures. It was replaced by the Intel Processor brand in 2023.
Before 2007 and post-Kaby Lake, some Intel Pentium and Intel Atom (e.g. N270, N450) processors support hyper-threading. Celeron processors never supported it. Intel processors table
Celeron is a series of IA-32 and x86-64 computer microprocessors targeted at low-cost personal computers, manufactured by Intel from 1998 until 2023.. The first Celeron-branded CPU was introduced on April 15, 1998, and was based on the Pentium II.
Intel Atom Oak Trail 2-way simultaneous multithreading, in-order, burst mode, 512 KB L2 cache Intel Atom Bonnell: 2008 SMT Intel Atom Silvermont: 2013 Out-of-order execution Intel Atom Goldmont: 2016 Multi-core, out-of-order execution, 3-wide superscalar pipeline, L2 cache Intel Atom Goldmont Plus: 2017 Multi-core Intel Atom Tremont: 2019
Lakefield: mobile-only, Intel's first hybrid processor, released in June 2020. Tremont is used in efficiency cores (E-cores) of Lakefield processors. [12] Jasper Lake: Celeron and Pentium Silver desktop and mobile processors, released in Q1 2021. Elkhart Lake: embedded processors targeted at IoT, released in Q1 2021. Gracemont
List of AMD processors with 3D graphics; List of Intel microprocessors; List of Intel CPU microarchitectures; Comparison of Intel processors This page was last ...
Goldmont Plus is a microarchitecture for low-power Celeron and Pentium Silver branded processors used in systems on a chip (SoCs) made by Intel. The Gemini Lake platform with 14 nm Goldmont Plus core was officially launched on December 11, 2017. [1] Intel launched the Gemini Lake Refresh platform on November 4, 2019. [2] [3]
Arrandale is the code name for a family of mobile Intel processors, sold as mobile Intel Core i3, i5 and i7 as well as Celeron and Pentium. [1] [2] It is closely related to the desktop Clarkdale processor; both use dual-core dies based on the Westmere 32 nm die shrink of the Nehalem microarchitecture, and have integrated Graphics as well as PCI Express and DMI links.