Community Sites
Create your own community website and start earning today !
It's Free !
 
Communities Members BookmarksPolls Fresher Jobs Funny Pictures MCA Projects New Member FAQ  



My Profile
Active Members
TodayLast 7 Days more...



Awards & Gifts
Online Exams

Fresher Jobs


Our fresher job section is exclusively for fresh graduates! Find jobs for freshers in major Indian cities including Bangalore, Chennai, Hyderabad, Pune or Kochi

Resources


Find educational articles, blogs, discussion threads and other resources.

Colleges


Find details about any college in India or search for courses.

website counter



pentium


Posted Date: 18 Feb 2008    Resource Type: Articles/Knowledge Sharing    Category: Education

Posted By: Moncy       Member Level: Silver
Rating:     Points: 3



The Pentium[1] brand refers to Intel's single-core x86 microprocessor[2] based on the P5 fifth-generation microarchitecture considered here as such only. The name 'Pentium' was derived from the Greek penta, meaning 'five', and the Latin ending -ium.

Introduced on March 22, 1993[3], the Pentium succeeded the Intel486, which number "4" signified the fourth-generation microarchitecture. Intel selected the Pentium name after courts had disallowed trademarking of names containing numbers - like "286", "i386", "i486" - though, sometimes, the Pentium is unofficially referred to as i586. In 1996, the original Pentium was succeeded by the Pentium MMX branded CPUs still based on the P5 fifth-generation microarchitecture.

Starting in 1995, Intel (inconsistently) used the "Pentium" registered trademark in the names of families of post-fifth-generations of x86 processors branded as the Pentium Pro, Pentium II, Pentium III, Pentium 4 and Pentium D (see Pentium (brand)). Although they shared the x86 instruction set with the original Pentium (and its predecessors), their microarchitectures were radically different from the P5 microarchitecture of CPUs branded just as the "Pentium" and "Pentium MMX". In 2006, the Pentium ® briefly disappeared from Intel's roadmaps[4][5] to reemerge in 2007 and solidify in 2008[6].

Vinod Dham is often referred to as the father of the Intel Pentium processor.[7] [8]





Responses


No responses found. Be the first to respond and make money from revenue sharing program.

Feedbacks      
Popular Tags   What are tags ?   Search Tags  
(No tags found.)

Post Feedback


This is a strictly moderated forum. Only approved messages will appear in the site. Please use 'Spell Check' in Google toolbar before you submit.
You must Sign In to post a response.
Next Resource: 8085
Previous Resource: LINUX
Return to Discussion Resource Index
Post New Resource
Category: Education


Post resources and earn money!
 
Related Resources

Watch TV Channels



Contact Us    Editors    Privacy Policy    Terms Of Use   

SpiderWorks Technologies Pvt Ltd. 2006 - 2007 All Rights Reserved.