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The Pentium 4 itself NetBurst. Since its introduction in the mid-90s, Intel's P6 core micro architecture has gone from strength to strength.
Intel plans to ring in the new year with a variety of new chips, including a more budget-minded version of the Pentium 4. The Santa Clara, Calif.-based chipmaker is coming out with a 1.3-GHz ...
Currently, the fastest Pentium III operates at 1.13 GHz and sells for $990. The company's cheapest Celeron, by contrast, sells for less than $100. Intel hasn't yet announced pricing for the Pentium 4.
Intel aimed to fix this with the Pentium 4 by introducing a quad-pumped FSB, where four signals are sent per clock cycle. The FSB still fundamentally ran at 100MHz, but it had an effective ...
After 30 years, both Pentium and Celeron brands will be replaced with Intel Processor in 2023. New laptops in 2023 will ship with Intel Processor instead. Skip to main content ...
Intel is Israel's biggest private-sector employer and has been behind some of its best-known projects, from the Pentium M to Cloverview.
Intel's processor lineup used to be, in the words of one of our greatest working artists, all about the Pentiums. That became less true beginning in the mid-2000s, when the modern "Core" branding ...
The Pentium 4 6xx-series sees Intel finally entering 64-bit desktop CPU market. The new chips also offer improved power management (EIST) and memory overflow protection (XD bit).
Intel's top Pentium chip, introduced in late 2000. The successor to the Pentium III, the Pentium 4 features the NetBurst micro-architecture (see NetBurst). All Pentium 4 chips are single core ...
The first Intel Pentium processor was shipped on March 22, 1993, kicking off what would become a core line for the company and a well-regarded brand to the public. The name Pentium came from the Greek ...