More dirt on Intel’s Penryn / Nehalem architecture
By Darren Murph | March 29, 2007
Filed under: Desktops
While you’ve been off dreaming of long-range WiFi, Intel’s not forgotten about its Penryn / Nehalem architectures, and thanks to an uber-boring slideshow presentation, we now know more than ever about the forthcoming duo. As expected, there isn’t much new on the oft detailed Penryn front, but the fresher Nehalem most certainly piqued our interest; while built on the same 45-nanometer technology as its predecessor, Nehalem is being hailed as “the most dramatic architecture shift since the introduction of the front-side bus in the Pentium Pro in 1996.” Attempting to back up such bold claims came news that HyperThreading would be native to Nehalem, and it would “share data at the L1 and potentially, the L3 cache levels,” allow eight-core CPUs to clock down to two / four, and boast scalability options to satisfy a wider market. Most intriguing, however, was the “optional high performance integrated graphics” that could reportedly be included on the same processor die, which could certainly prove interesting if crammed into, say, a UMPC. So if you’re still not satisfied with the highlights, and don’t get enough mundane PowerPoint action from your corporate employment, be sure to hit the read link when your friends aren’t looking.
Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments
BOLD MOVES: THE FUTURE OF FORD A new documentary series. Be part of the transformation as it happens in real-time
Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!
Topics: Gadgets |
« Microsoft releases “Deepfish” browser for Windows Mobile | Main | Nokia’s 5700 XpressMusic: another audio twister »
Comments
Similar Posts
- Intel’s 6-core Dunnington CPU coming this year, Nehalem gets official
Penryn Mac Pro and Xserve hands-on
Samsung’s Ultramobile PC Gets Vista
Intel reveals 45nm processor for UMPCs
Rock’s new Pegasus 210 12-inch ultraportable
Intel’s Nehalem roadmap gets outed
HP’s new UMPC 2133 hotness to run VIA, not Penryn?
Intel’s mobile Penryn processors for laptops live
Roper Mobile Technology intros rugged Duros tablet PC
ASUS gets really official with 17-inch G70 gaming laptop
Clearview XL43 UMPC beckons a name change
Intel sez Penryn’s done, lookout for 45nm Wolfdale / Yorkfield
AMD’s Phenom X4 9850 gets pitted against Intel’s Core 2 Quad Q9300
Hands-on with Samsung’s Q1 Ultra, Ultra Mobile PC
Raon set to release Everun UMPC
Fujitsu-Siemens’ tests its design chops with the AMILO Si 2636
Samsung Q1 Ultra UMPC, how nice to meet you
Wanted High Performance External Drive!
Details emerge on Montalvo’s Intel-challenging mystery processor
The 3.0GHz Core 2 Extreme QX6850: Intel’s fastest consumer CPU benchmarked

















