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The Pentium M represented a new and radical departure for Intel, as it was not a low-power version of the desktop-oriented Pentium 4, but instead a heavily modified version of the Pentium III Tualatin design (itself based on the Pentium II core design, which in turn had been a heavily improved evolution of the Pentium Pro).
Enhanced Pentium M: updated, dual core version of the Pentium M microarchitecture used in the first Intel Core microprocessors, first x86 to have shadow register architecture and speed step technology. NetBurst commonly referred to as P7 although its internal name was P68 (P7 was used for Itanium).
This is a list of Intel Pentium M processors. They are all single-core 32-bit CPUs codenamed Banias and Dothan , and targeted at the consumer market of mobile computers. Mobile processors
Stealey is a low-power x86 architecture microprocessor based on a Dothan core derived from the Intel Pentium M, built on a 90 nm process with 512 KB L2 cache and 400 MT/s front side bus (FSB). It was branded as Intel A100 and Intel A110 and appeared as part of the McCaslin platform. [1]
Yonah is the code name of Intel's first generation 65 nm process CPU cores, based on cores of the earlier Banias (130 nm) / Dothan (90 nm) Pentium M microarchitecture.Yonah CPU cores were used within Intel's Core Solo and Core Duo mobile microprocessor products.
1995. Intel introduces the Pentium Pro which becomes the foundation for the Pentium II, Pentium III, Pentium M and Intel Core architectures. 2000. IBM introduce z/Architecture, the 64-bit version of their mainframe architecture. 2000. AMD announced x86-64 64-bit extension to the x86 microarchitecture. 2000. AMD hits 1 GHz with its Athlon ...
Tick–tock was a production model adopted in 2007 by chip manufacturer Intel.Under this model, every new process technology was first used to manufacture a die shrink of a proven microarchitecture (tick), followed by a new microarchitecture on the now-proven process (tock).
The Pentium (also referred to as the i586 or P5 Pentium) is a microprocessor introduced by Intel on March 22, 1993. It is the first CPU using the Pentium brand. [3] [4] Considered the fifth generation in the x86 (8086) compatible line of processors, [5] succeeding the i486, its implementation and microarchitecture was internally called P5.