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Core voltage is 1.15 volts in Maximum Performance Mode; 1.05 volts in battery optimized mode; Power <1 watt in battery optimized mode; Used in full-size and then light mobile PCs; 0.18 μm process technology Willamette (1.9 and 2.0 GHz) Introduced August 27, 2001; See 1.4 and 1.5 chips for details; Family 15 model 1; Pentium 4 (2 GHz, 2.20 GHz)
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.
In April 2022, press reported on "hints" that Intel was working on Alder Lake-X. [13] [14] Intel officially announced the HX processor series on May 10, 2022, including Core i5, Core i7 and Core i9 models, [10] when Intel announced "seven new mobile processors for the 12th Gen Intel Core mobile family at its Intel Vision event. [15]
The Work benchmark test includes a set of workloads that reflect common tasks for an office environment. The Applications benchmark measures system performance using applications from Adobe Creative Suite and Microsoft Office. The Storage benchmark is a component level test for measuring the performance of SSDs, HDDs and hybrid drives.
Transactional Synchronization Extensions (TSX), also called Transactional Synchronization Extensions New Instructions (TSX-NI), is an extension to the x86 instruction set architecture (ISA) that adds hardware transactional memory support, speeding up execution of multi-threaded software through lock elision.
AVX-512 are 512-bit extensions to the 256-bit Advanced Vector Extensions SIMD instructions for x86 instruction set architecture (ISA) proposed by Intel in July 2013, and first implemented in the 2016 Intel Xeon Phi x200 (Knights Landing), [1] and then later in a number of AMD and other Intel CPUs (see list below).
A graphical demo running as a benchmark of the OGRE engine. In computing, a benchmark is the act of running a computer program, a set of programs, or other operations, in order to assess the relative performance of an object, normally by running a number of standard tests and trials against it.
CoreMark is a benchmark that measures the performance of central processing units (CPU) used in embedded systems.It was developed in 2009 [1] by Shay Gal-On at EEMBC and is intended to become an industry standard, replacing the Dhrystone benchmark. [2]