Wednesday, 2 December 2015
Architectural Advances
In Recent years Intel has managed to follow this low and ahead of competition by releasing more powerful chips for the PC than any other company. In 1978 the 8086 ran at 4:77 MHZ and had under a million transistor. By the end of 1995 their Pentium pro had a 21-million on-chip transistors and ran at 200 MHZ.
In Recent years Intel has managed to follow this low and ahead of competition by releasing more powerful chips for the PC than any other company. In 1978 the 8086 ran at 4:77 MHZ and had under a million transistor. By the end of 1995 their Pentium pro had a 21-million on-chip transistors and ran at 200 MHZ.
In Recent years Intel has managed to follow this low and ahead of competition by releasing more powerful chips for the PC than any other company. In 1978 the 8086 ran at 4:77 MHZ and had under a million transistor. By the end of 1995 their Pentium pro had a 21-million on-chip transistors and ran at 200 MHZ.
In Recent years Intel has managed to follow this low and ahead of competition by releasing more powerful chips for the PC than any other company. In 1978 the 8086 ran at 4:77 MHZ and had under a million transistor. By the end of 1995 their Pentium pro had a 21-million on-chip transistors and ran at 200 MHZ.
In Recent years Intel has managed to follow this low and ahead of competition by releasing more powerful chips for the PC than any other company. In 1978 the 8086 ran at 4:77 MHZ and had under a million transistor. By the end of 1995 their Pentium pro had a 21-million on-chip transistors and ran at 200 MHZ.
In Recent years Intel has managed to follow this low and ahead of competition by releasing more powerful chips for the PC than any other company. In 1978 the 8086 ran at 4:77 MHZ and had under a million transistor. By the end of 1995 their Pentium pro had a 21-million on-chip transistors and ran at 200 MHZ.
In Recent years Intel has managed to follow this low and ahead of competition by releasing more powerful chips for the PC than any other company. In 1978 the 8086 ran at 4:77 MHZ and had under a million transistor. By the end of 1995 their Pentium pro had a 21-million on-chip transistors and ran at 200 MHZ. 11
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