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Intel Atom is Intel's line of low-power, low-cost and low-performance x86 and x86-64 microprocessors.Atom, with codenames of Silverthorne and Diamondville, was first announced on March 2, 2008.
The following is a partial list of Intel CPU microarchitectures. The list is incomplete, additional details can be found in Intel's tick–tock model, process–architecture–optimization model and Template:Intel processor roadmap.
Atom is a system on a chip (SoC) platform designed for smartphones and tablet computers, launched by Intel in 2012. [1] It is a continuation of the partnership announced by Intel and Google on September 13, 2011 to provide support for the Android operating system on Intel x86 processors. [2]
Around the time that the Pentium 4 processor was introduced, Intel's Xeon line diverged from its line of desktop processors, which at the time was using the Pentium branding.
AVX-512 are 512-bit extensions to the 256-bit Advanced Vector Extensions SIMD instructions for x86 instruction set architecture (ISA) proposed by Intel in July 2013, and first implemented in the 2016 Intel Xeon Phi x200 (Knights Landing), [1] and then later in a number of AMD and other Intel CPUs (see list below).
Intel Atom N2800. Intel Atom is a direct successor of the Intel A100 and A110 low-power processors (code-named Stealey), which were built on a 90 nm process, had 512 kB L2 cache and ran at 600 MHz/800 MHz with 3 W TDP (Thermal Design Power).
Support for up to 16 DIMMs of DDR4 memory per CPU socket, maximum 4 TB.; Supports up to two sockets [1]; PCI Express 4.0 lanes: 64-M: Media processing specialized-N: Network & NFV specialized
Based on NetBurst microarchitecture; All models support: MMX, SSE, SSE2, Hyper-Threading All models support dual-processor configurations; Models with no suffix or the A suffix use Socket 603 and a 400 MT/s FSB while models with the B suffix use Socket 604 and a 533 MT/s FSB.