The long-running legal battle started with the Commission leveling the fine in 2009 after concluding that Intel crossed antitrust lines in the early aughts, when the Pentium 4 faced off against ...
I was looking up some history behind the x86-64 transition, particularly around the Pentium 4 time ... isn't that Intel Itanium processors completely did away with x86 software and architecture.
the P4S13G supports a low-latency architecture and advanced features such as dynamic look-ahead cache and adaptive page management to significantly improve memory access speed. To harness even more ...
In 2009, the European Commission found that Intel had been up to two dodgy practices in the very early 2000s. This was around the time that Intel was chasing gigahertz with the Pentium 4 Netburst ...
The most recent Atom used in laptops is from 2016 and it was hardly fast back then. Up until recently, there were separate brands for Celeron and Pentium processors. Intel has now bundled both of them ...