Chapter 1: Nick Nicholls, Albert Chu: Difference between revisions

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{| class="wikitable"
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! Header 1
! From
! Header 2
! Procs
! Header 3
! Specifications
! New Features
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| row 1, cell 1
| 2000
| row 1, cell 2
| Pentium IV
| row 1, cell 3
| 1.4-3GHz, 55M transistors
| hyper-pipelining, SMT
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| row 2, cell 1
| 2006
| row 2, cell 2
| Xeon
| row 2, cell 3
| 64-bit, 2GHz, 167M transistors, 4MB L2 cache on chip
| Dual core, virtualization support
|-
|-
| row 3, cell 1
|  
| row 3, cell 2
|  
| row 3, cell 3
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Revision as of 18:02, 6 February 2012

Transistor Count

According to the text, since 1971 the number of transistors on a chip has increased from 2,300 to 167 million in 2006. By 2011, the transistor count had further increased to 2.6 billion, a 1,130,434x increase from 1971. The clock frequency has also continued to rise, if a bit slower since 2006. At the time, it was around 2.4ghz, a 3k multiple of the speed in 1971 of 750khz. Now the high end clock speed of a processor is in the 3.3ghz range.

Increase

Evolution of Intel Processors

From Procs Specifications New Features
2000 Pentium IV 1.4-3GHz, 55M transistors hyper-pipelining, SMT
2006 Xeon 64-bit, 2GHz, 167M transistors, 4MB L2 cache on chip Dual core, virtualization support

Cores

Sources

  1. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transistor_count