Kristine Hermosa Pekpek Video


The Intel Pentium family
ProducedFrom 1993 to 1999
Common manufacturer(s)Intel
Max. CPU clock60 MHz to 300 MHz
FSB speeds50  to 66 
Min. feature size0.8µm to 0. Pornos Mexicano 25µm
Instruction setx86
MicroarchitectureP5
Cores1
Socket(s)Socket 4, Socket 5, Socket 7
Core name(s)P5. P54, P54CS, P55C, Tillamook

The original Pentium processor was a 32-bit microprocessor produced by Intel. The first superscalar x86 architecture processor, it was introduced on March 22, 1993. Pornos Mexicano Its microarchitecture (sometimes called P5) was a direct extension of the 80486 architecture with dual integer pipelines, a faster FPU, wider data bus, and features for further reduced address calculation latency. In 1996, the Pentium MMX was introduced with the same basic microarchitecture complemented with MMX instructions, larger caches, and some other enhancements.

The name Pentium was derived from the Greek pente (πέντε), meaning 'five', and the Latin ending -ium, a name selected after courts had disallowed trademarking of number-based names like "i586" or "80586". In 1995, Intel started to employ the registered Pentium trademark also for x86 processors with radically different microarchitectures (Pentium Pro / II / III / 4 / D / M). In 2006, the Pentium brand briefly disappeared from Intel's roadmaps, only to re-emerge in 2007.

Vinod Dham is often referred to as the father of the Intel Pentium processor, although many people, including John H. Crawford (of i386 and i486 alumni), were involved in the design and development of the processor.







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