Tuesday, December 02, 2008   
  Search   
 
Register  Login  
Forums  
     Minimize  

Welcome to MeraWindows forums.

Thank you for being at the Microsoft Windows Community Site. You may have to register before posting in forums. It's absolutely free. After registering, you can get all the benefits available to our registered members, you can access our Downloads section, you can participate in contests, etc. You can post in forums in English as well as in Hindi, in fact we encourage you to use Hindi in your posts. If you have any problem with registration or login, please contact us.

     
  


 
  Microsoft Windows Forums  News & Feedback  Latest News  40 Years of Intel
Previous Previous
 
Next Next
New Post 7/19/2008 11:58 PM
User is offline Rahul Manekari
1162 posts
www.manekari.blogspot.com
MW Addict




40 Years of Intel  

In honor of Intel's 40th birthday, we've compiled a list of the major dates in the history of the Intel chip. The company has helped define the technopoly we live in today, and how we work and play with our computers. From chips in a calculator, to 486 PCs, to the Pentium era in which our computers are outdated every season, Intel chips have been at the center of the personal computing world since its inception. Read ahead and wax nostalgic with us.


1971:
4004
4004
This 400-KHz chip was used in Busicom calculators and arithmetic manipulation. It was the world's first microprocessor, as well as the first semiconductor device that provided, at the chip level, the functions of a computer.


1974:
8080
8080
Found in traffic-light controllers, as well as within the Altair computer (the legendary first PC), the 8080 was the first widely accepted microprocessor.


1979:
8088
Blistering 5-MHz and 8-MHz models of this chip were the standard CPUs for all IBM PCs and PC clones at the time. The 8088's success launched Intel into the ranks of the Fortune 500.


1982:
80286
80286
With the introduction of the 286, a processor family is born. The 286 was the first chip Intel released to be backward-compatible with software written for the 8088.


1985:
386 DX
386 DX
The 386 was Intel's first 32-bit desktop chip, comprising 275,000 transistors.


1989:
486 DX
486 DX
The Intel 486 was the first CPU to offer a built-in math coprocessor, speeding computing by offloading complex math functions from the central processor.


1994:
Pentium
Pentium
Running at up to 100 MHz, the Pentium processor let computers more easily incorporate real-world data such as speech, sound, handwriting, and photographic images.


1995:
Pentium Pro
Pentium Pro
Released in the fall of 1995, the Intel Pentium Pro was designed to fuel 32-bit server and workstation applications. Each chip was packaged together with a second speed-enhancing cache memory chip. The Pentium Pro incorporated 5.5 million transistors.


1996:
Pentium II
Pentium II
High-performance desktop and servers came with the 7.5 million-transistor Intel Pentium II, incorporating MMX technology—designed specifically to process video, audio, and graphics data efficiently. It was introduced in a single edge contact (SEC) cartridge that also had a high-speed cache memory chip.


1998:
Pentium II Xeon
The Intel Pentium II Xeon was designed for workstations and servers; systems based on it could be configured to scale to four or eight processors and beyond. This took multitasking even further.


1999:
Pentium III
Pentium III
Running as fast at 500 MHz, the PIII featured 70 new instructions—including streaming SIMD extensions—to enhanced performance, particularly the Internet experience. The processor incorporates 9.5 million transistors, and was introduced using 0.25-micron technology.

 

 

 

 

 

2000 - Present

2000:
Celeron
Low Voltage Mobile Intel Celeron
Designed for the ultraportable mobile PC, the Celeron provided exceptionally low price points, and it delivered decent performance for those mobile systems.


Pentium 4

Pentium 4 The P4 debuted with 42 million transistors and circuit lines of 0.18 microns. Intel's first microprocessor, the 4004, designed 30 years earlier, ran at 108 kilohertz (108,000 hertz), compared to the P4's initial speed of 1.5 gigahertz (1.5 billion hertz).


2002:
Pentium 4 3.06 GHz
with Hyper-Threading Technology Intel's latest technology, Hyper-Threading lets one chip simulate two physical processors, letting it process data more efficiently.


2004:
Low Voltage Intel Pentium M
The Pentium M, the 855 chipset, and the PRO/Wireless 2100 were the three main components of Intel's Centrino platform. Centrino was designed specifically for portable computing, with built-in wireless LAN capability and breakthrough mobile performance.


2005:
Pentium 4 Processor Extreme Edition
Running at a whopping 3.8 GHz, the P4 Extreme Edition was the fastest clocked chip Intel ever officially released. Gaming enthusiasts worldwide rejoiced.


Pentium D 800 The birth of dual-core! Desktop PCs took advantage of this new technology, which packed two processor cores into a single CPU.


2006:
Core Duo
Intel's current chip architecture, called Core, was initially released in 2006. Lauded for its speed and efficient design, the chip quickly won Intel a dramatic performance lead.


2007:
Core 2 Quad Q6600
Desktop PCs, particularly high-end gaming systems, featured this 2.4-GHz quad-core processor. Quad-cores are still considered the bleeding edge of technology today.


2008:
Atom Z540
Designed for UMPCs and other portable devices, the Atom is Intel's smallest chip. It nevertheless uses some big technologies, such as the 45nm Hi-k Metal Gate manufacturing technology.

Source : here


Rahul Manekari
Be Live...with Me...!!! Click here
 
New Post 7/20/2008 12:33 AM
User is offline Vishal Gupta
6363 posts
www.AskVG.com
Ultimate Member








Re: 40 Years of Intel  

Nice. Happy Birthday to Intel. Keep processing.


Tweaking with Vishal

How to Use Smiley Code in Forum?
Promote MeraWindows at Your Blog / Site
Read Forum Guidelines
 
New Post 7/20/2008 7:23 AM
User is offline Hari Maurya
1275 posts
www.techsurface.com
MW Addict




Re: 40 Years of Intel  

Happy Birthday Intel........


Hari Maurya's TechSurface

Its My World, Its Mera Windows and I proud to be a MWians
Mera Live Status, Click to Talk
 
New Post 7/20/2008 9:31 AM
User is offline Rahul Manekari
1162 posts
www.manekari.blogspot.com
MW Addict




Re: 40 Years of Intel  

Happy Birthday INTEL

Tum 100 saal aur jiyo..

 


Rahul Manekari
Be Live...with Me...!!! Click here
 
New Post 7/20/2008 9:50 AM
User is offline Hari Maurya
1275 posts
www.techsurface.com
MW Addict




Re: 40 Years of Intel  

 Rahul Manekari wrote

Happy Birthday INTEL

Tum 100 saal aur jiyo..

 

Nahi tum Lifetime jiyo


Hari Maurya's TechSurface

Its My World, Its Mera Windows and I proud to be a MWians
Mera Live Status, Click to Talk
 
Previous Previous
 
Next Next
  Microsoft Windows Forums  News & Feedback  Latest News  40 Years of Intel


   Get Your Own E-Mail Account @MeraWindows.com Minimize  
New Page 1 New Page 1
Show your cool quotient with @merawindows.com email account