Noted hardware historian and reverse-engineer Ken Shirriff recently found the exact transistors in the original Intel Pentium which caused the "FDIV bug", leading to a $475 million recall in 1994.
[Ken Shirriff] has been sharing a really low-level look at Intel’s Pentium (1993) processor. The Pentium’s architecture was highly innovative in many ways, and one of [Ken]’s most recent ...
Currently, Intel has several product brands: Core Ultra, Core (Series 1), Core (14th gen and below), Core (N-series), Processor, Pentium, and Celeron. Core Ultra are high-end chips designed for AI ...
Intel's top Pentium chip, introduced in late 2000. The successor to the Pentium III, the Pentium 4 features the NetBurst micro-architecture (see NetBurst). All Pentium 4 chips are single core ...
This driver adds support for the new Microsoft Windows 10 operating system for N Series Intel Pentium and Intel Celeron Processors with Intel HD Graphics.
Case in point an original (P54C) Intel Pentium, which [Ken Shirriff] took an in-depth look at. Using a by now almost unimaginably large 600 nm process, the individual elements of these standard ...
Up until recently, there were separate brands for Celeron and Pentium processors. Intel has now bundled both of them up into a brand called Intel Processor followed by a model name that often starts ...