Phynaz
Lifer
Originally posted by: TuxDave
Originally posted by: Phynaz
Originally posted by: taltamir
Core3 QUAD... how can you mistake it for anything else? although they could be hoping that people confuse HT with having twice the cores... in which case there will be no "quad" designation.
Someone posted in the comments to the article:
386 = i1
486 = i2
P5 = i3
P6 = i4
Netburst = i5
Core = i6
Nehalem = i7
Which would make this:
286 = i0
186 = i(1)
8088 = i(2)
8086 = i(3)
4004 = i(4)
Or, what I'm guessing, is the chip has 7 math units.
Which it doesn't.....
Bummer, I was hoping for less shared hardware.