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  2. Comparison of Intel processors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_Intel_processors

    Some Xeon Phi processors support four-way hyper-threading, effectively quadrupling the number of threads. [1] Before the Coffee Lake architecture, most Xeon and all desktop and mobile Core i3 and i7 supported hyper-threading while only dual-core mobile i5's supported it.

  3. Computer performance by orders of magnitude - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_performance_by...

    1.8×10 1: ENIAC, first programmable electronic digital computer, 1945 [2] 5×10 1: upper end of serialized human perception computation (light bulbs do not flicker to the human observer) 7×10 1: Whirlwind I 1951 vacuum tube computer and IBM 1620 1959 transistorized scientific minicomputer [2]

  4. UserBenchmark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Userbenchmark

    UserBenchmark is a computer benchmark program that gives the user's computer hardware scores based on the computers performance. The website provides computer hardware ranking charts which compare performance between CPU, GPU, SSD, HDD, RAM, and USB drive models.

  5. Instructions per second - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Instructions_per_second

    Instructions per second (IPS) is a measure of a computer's processor speed. For complex instruction set computers (CISCs), different instructions take different amounts of time, so the value measured depends on the instruction mix; even for comparing processors in the same family the IPS measurement can be problematic.

  6. Table of AMD processors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Table_of_AMD_processors

    Bus Speed & Type [a] Cache Socket ... 256 PC, FS Socket 939: DDR: ... List of Intel CPU microarchitectures; Comparison of Intel processors

  7. Floating point operations per second - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Floating_point_operations...

    $15,000,000 / 0.8 GFLOPS. Third-generation (integrated circuit-based) computer. 1997 $30,000 $56,940 Two 16-processor Beowulf clusters with Pentium Pro microprocessors [79] April 2000: $1,000 $1,798 Bunyip Beowulf cluster: Bunyip was the first sub-US$ 1/MFLOPS computing technology. It won the Gordon Bell Prize in 2000. May 2000: $640 $1,132 KLAT2