Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Socket 754" ¶ 1
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Socket and 754
Socket A was replaced by Socket 754 and Socket 939 during 2003 and 2004 respectively, except for its use with Geode NX processors.
The second generation ( Paris / Palermo core ) was based on the architecture of the Socket 754 Athlon 64.
Apart from these differences, the Socket 754 Sempron CPUs share most features with the more powerful Athlon 64, including an integrated ( on-die ) memory controller, the HyperTransport link, and AMD's " NX bit " feature.
The Socket AM2 version also does not require a minimum voltage of 1. 1 volts to operate, whereas all socket 754 Semprons with Cool ' n ' Quiet did.
In 2006, AMD was selling both Socket 754 and Socket AM2 Sempron CPUs concurrently.
Socket 939 is a CPU socket released by AMD in June 2004 to supersede the previous Socket 754 for Athlon 64 processors.
Socket 754 is a CPU socket originally developed by AMD to succeed its Athlon XP platform ( socket 462, also referred to as Socket A ).
Socket 754 was the first socket developed by AMD to support their new consumer version of the 64 bit microprocessor family known as AMD64.
Due to the introduction of newer socket layouts ( i. e. Socket 939, Socket 940 and Socket AM2 ), Socket 754 became the more " budget-minded " socket for use with AMD Athlon 64 or Sempron processors.
Although AMD promoted Socket 754 as a budget platform on the desktop and encouraged mid-and high-end users to use newer platforms, Socket 754 remained for some time as AMD's high-end solution for mobile applications, ( e. g. the HP zv6000 series ).
However, Socket S1 was released and superseded Socket 754 in the mobile CPU segment, with support for dual-core CPUs and DDR2 SDRAM.
The first processors using Socket 754 came on the market in the second half of 2003.

Socket and was
FIC demonstrated the first Socket 7 AGP system board in November 1997 as the FIC PA-2012 based on the VIA Apollo VP3 chipset, followed very quickly by the EPoX P55-VP3 also based on the VIA VP3 chipset which was first to market.
The Athlon XP-M was also offered in a compact microPGA socket 563 version for space constrained applications as an alternative to the larger Socket A.
It was also made pin-compatible with Intel's Pentium, enabling it to be used in the widely available " Socket 7 "- based motherboards.
The lower voltage and higher multiplier of the K6-266 meant that it was not 100 % compatible with some Socket 7 motherboards, similar to the later K6-2 processors.
Socket holes in the piers of the crossing suggest that, as well as a rood screen, there was a further screen dividing nave and crossing, such as still exists at Dunster in Somerset.
The packaging was designed for Socket 8.
In 1998, the 300 / 333 MHz Pentium II Overdrive processor for Socket 8 was released.
Released in August 1995, four months before the more famous Cyrix 6x86, the Cyrix 5x86 was one of the fastest CPUs ever produced for Socket 3 computer systems.
The Cyrix 5x86 design, however, should not be confused with the similarly named AMD Am5x86 which was essentially a fast 486 ( not an all-new design like the Cyrix part ) but which had broadly similar performance, used the same Socket 3, and was introduced at the end of the same year.
Since having a clock multiplier of four was not part of the original Socket 3 design, AMD made the 5x86 accept a 2x setting from the motherboard and instead operate at a rate of 4x.
Socket 7 was the only socket that supported a wide range of CPUs from different manufacturers and a wide range of speeds.
An extension of Socket 7, Super Socket 7, was developed by AMD for their K6-2 and K6-III processors to operate at a higher clock rate and use AGP.
The FCPGA was introduced by Intel with the Coppermine core Pentium III and Celeron processors based on Socket 370, and was later used for Socket 478-based Pentium 4 and Celeron processors.
However, it was still based upon the aging Socket 370, running the single data rate front side bus at just 133 MHz.
SIMD instruction set, featured a larger 64 KiB Level 1 cache ( 32 KiB instruction and 32 KiB data ), and an upgraded system-bus interface called Super Socket 7, which was backward compatible with older Socket 7 motherboards.
It was the last Socket 7 desktop processor.
Super Socket was used by AMD K6-2 and K6-III processors, and some of the final Cyrix M-II processors.
While AMD had previously always used Intel sockets for their processors, Socket 7 was the last one for which AMD retained legal rights.
Socket 370 was originally used for the Intel Celeron, but later became the socket / platform for the Coppermine and Tualatin Pentium III processors, as well as the Via-Cyrix Cyrix III, later renamed the VIA C3.

Socket and original
The original Pentium chips ran at higher voltages than later models, with a slower 60 or 66 MHz front side bus speed ( Socket 4, 5V ).
The suffixes M and F ( for male and female ) are sometimes used instead of the original P and S for Pin and Socket.

Socket and socket
This version of the Athlon shipped in a more traditional pin-grid array ( PGA ) format that plugged into a socket (" Socket A ") on the motherboard ( it also shipped in the slot A package ).
Socket technology for lower extremity limbs saw a revolution of advancement during the 1980s when John Sabolich C. P. O., invented the Contoured Adducted Trochanteric-Controlled Alignment Method ( CATCAM ) socket, later to evolve into the Sabolich Socket.
* Super Socket 7, a chip socket introduced by AMD
Socket F ( LGA 1207 contacts ) is AMD ’ s second generation of Opteron socket.
This socket is physically similar to Socket F but is not compatible with Socket F CPUs.
Socket 7 is a physical and electrical specification for an x86-style CPU socket on a personal computer motherboard.
The socket supersedes the earlier Socket 5, and accepts P5 Pentium microprocessors manufactured by Intel, as well as compatibles made by Cyrix / IBM, AMD, IDT and others.
Socket 7 typically uses a 321-pin ( arranged as 19 by 19 pins ) SPGA ZIF socket or the very rare 296-pin ( arranged as 37 by 37 pins ) SPGA LIF socket.
The pin grid array on the bottom of an AMD Phenom X4 9750 processor that uses the AMD Socket AM2 + | AM2 + socket.
The ODPR chips had 168 pins and functioned as complete swap-out replacements for existing chips, whereas the ODP chips had an extra 169th pin, and were used for inserting into a special ' Overdrive ' ( Socket 1 ) socket on some 486 boards, which would disable the existing CPU without needing to remove it ( in case that the existing CPU is surface mounted ).
The Super Socket 7, also referred to as Super 7, is an extension of the Socket 7 ZIF socket specification.
* Socket head screw, a screw ( or bolt ) with a cylindrical head containing a socket into which the hexagonal ends of an Allen wrench will fit
* Socket M2, a CPU socket
Socket 370 ( also known as the PGA370 socket ) is a common format of CPU socket first used by Intel for Pentium III and Celeron processors to replace the older Slot 1 CPU interface on personal computers.
* Super Socket 7, a CPU socket
Socket 6 was a 486-generation CPU socket, a slightly modified version of the more common Socket 3.

0.189 seconds.