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Intel Atom Processor E3800 Product Family and Intel Celeron Processor N2807/N2930/J1900: The San Francisco Bay Trail, which is located a few miles from Intel HQ in Santa Clara, CA. 2014 Bear Canyon Motherboard Intel D945GBO motherboard. Micro-BTX form factor, Socket T , 945G chipset . Reference unknown. 2006 Bearlake: Chipset
Intel Core Duo L2500 1.83 GHz (low voltage, 15 W TDP) Intel Core Duo L2400 1.66 GHz (low voltage, 15 W TDP) Intel Core Duo L2300 1.5 GHz (low voltage, 15 W TDP) Intel Core Duo U2500 1.2 GHz (ultra-low voltage, 9 W TDP) Intel Core Solo T1350 1.86 GHz (533 FSB) Intel Core Solo T1300 1.66 GHz; Intel Core Solo T1200 1.5 GHz
The latest badge promoting the Intel Core branding. The following is a list of Intel Core processors. This includes the original Core (Solo/Duo) mobile series based on the Enhanced Pentium M microarchitecture, as well as Core 2 (Solo/Duo/Quad/Extreme), Core i3, Core i5, Core i7, Core i9, Core M (m3/m5/m7), Core 3, Core 5 and Core 7 branded processors.
released November 17, 2008, built on a 45 nm process and used in the Core i7, Core i5, Core i3 microprocessors. Incorporates the memory controller into the CPU die. Added important powerful new instructions, SSE4.2 . Westmere: 32 nm shrink of the Nehalem microarchitecture with several new features.
The Intel Core microarchitecture (provisionally referred to as Next Generation Micro-architecture, [1] and developed as Merom) [2] is a multi-core processor microarchitecture launched by Intel in mid-2006. It is a major evolution over the Yonah, the previous iteration of the P6 microarchitecture series which started in 1995 with Pentium Pro.
Legacy support for iGPU. Cannon Lake (formerly Skymont) is Intel's codename for the 8th generation of Core processors based on Palm Cove, a 10 nm die shrink of the Kaby Lake microarchitecture. As a die shrink, Palm Cove is a new process in Intel's process-architecture-optimization execution plan as the next step in semiconductor fabrication. [1]
Nehalem / nəˈheɪləm / [1] is the codename for Intel 's 45 nm microarchitecture released in November 2008. [2] It was used in the first generation of the Intel Core i5 and i7 processors, and succeeds the older Core microarchitecture used on Core 2 processors. [3] The term "Nehalem" comes from the Nehalem River. [4] [5]
Skylake is a microarchitecture redesign using the same 14 nm manufacturing process technology [10] as its predecessor, serving as a tock in Intel's tick–tock manufacturing and design model. According to Intel, the redesign brings greater CPU and GPU performance and reduced power consumption.