AT News Update: Socket 775 Processor Names
by Kristopher Kubicki on April 8, 2004 1:07 PM EST- Posted in
- CPUs
Weeks ago
we found a little info going around that Intel plans to rename their upcoming
Socket T/Socket 478 processors to reflect a new naming convention.
Update April 8, 2004: After receiving more information and confirmation,
we have updated our roadmaps.
You can read more about Intel's naming conventions on their site, here.
Without further ado:
2004 Pentium 4 Roadmap (5xx) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
CPU | Manufacturing
Process |
Bus
Speed |
L2
Cache Size |
Product Name |
Pentium 4 EE 3.4GHz | 130nm |
800MHz |
512KB |
??? |
Pentium 4 EE 3.2GHz | 130nm |
800MHz |
512KB |
??? |
Pentium 4 4.0GHz | 90nm |
800MHz |
1MB |
580 |
Pentium 4 3.8GHz | 90nm |
800MHz |
1MB |
570 |
Pentium 4 M 3.6GHz | 90nm |
533MHz |
1MB |
558 |
Pentium 4 3.6GHz |
90nm |
800MHz |
1MB |
560 |
Pentium 4 M 3.46GHz | 90nm |
533MHz |
1MB |
552 |
Pentium 4 3.4GHz | 90nm |
800MHz |
1MB |
550 |
Pentium 4 3.2GHz | 90nm |
800MHz |
1MB |
540 |
Pentium 4 M 3.2GHz | 90nm |
533MHz |
1MB |
538 |
Pentium 4 M 3.06GHz | 90nm |
533MHz |
1MB |
532 |
Pentium 4 3.0GHz | 90nm |
800MHz |
1MB |
530 |
Pentium 4 2.8GHz | 90nm |
800MHz |
1MB |
520 |
Pentium 4 M 2.8GHz | 90nm |
533MHz |
1MB |
518 |
2004 Celeron Roadmap (3xx) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
CPU | Manufacturing
Process |
Bus
Speed |
L2
Cache Size |
Product Name |
Celeron M 1.5GHz | 90nm |
400MHz |
1MB |
370 |
Celeron M 1.4GHz | 90nm |
400MHz |
1MB |
360 |
Celeron M ULV 1.0GHz | 90nm |
400MHz |
512KB |
358 |
Celeron M 1.3GHz | 90nm |
400MHz |
1MB |
350 |
Celeron 3.2GHz | 90nm |
533MHz |
256KB |
350 |
Celeron 3.06GHz | 90nm |
533MHz |
256KB |
345 |
Celeron M 1.5GHz | 130nm |
400MHz |
512KB |
340 |
Celeron 2.93Gz | 90nm |
533MHz |
256KB |
340 |
Celeron M ULV 900MHz | 90nm |
400MHz |
512KB |
338 |
Celeron 2.8GHz | 90nm |
533MHz |
256KB |
335 |
Celeron M 1.4GHz | 130nm |
400MHz |
512KB |
330 |
Celeron 2.66GHz | 90nm |
533MHz |
256KB |
330 |
Celeron 2.53GHz | 90nm |
533MHz |
256KB |
325 |
Celeron M 1.3GHz | 130nm |
400MHz |
512KB |
320 |
The new 90nm Celerons based on the Prescott core have bee dubbed "Celeron D." Note the suffix "LV" denotes "Low Voltage," while "ULV" denotes "Ultra Low Voltage." There is an unusual amount of overlap in the Celeron roadmaps, which may become confusing to consumers in the long run.
Finally, we have an update on the Pentium M naming convensions.
2004 Pentium M Roadmap (7xx) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
CPU | Manufacturing
Process |
Bus
Speed |
L2
Cache Size |
Product Name |
Pentium M 2.13GHz | 90nm |
533MHz |
2MB |
770 |
Pentium M 2.0GHz | 90nm |
533MHz |
2MB |
760 |
Pentium M ULV 1.20GHz | 90nm |
400MHz |
2MB |
758 |
Pentium M 2.0GHz | 90nm |
400MHz |
2MB |
755 |
Pentium M LV 1.5GHz | 90nm |
400MHz |
2MB |
753 |
Pentium M 1.86GHz | 90nm |
533MHz |
2MB |
750 |
Pentium M 1.8GHz | 90nm |
400MHz |
2MB |
745 |
Pentium M 1.73GHz | 90nm |
533MHz |
2MB |
740 |
Pentium M ULV 1.10GHz | 90nm |
400MHz |
2MB |
738 |
Pentium M 1.70GHz | 90nm |
400MHz |
2MB |
735 |
Pentium M LV 1.40GHz | 90nm |
400MHz |
2MB |
733 |
Pentium M 1.60GHz | 90nm |
533MHz |
2MB |
730 |
Pentium M 1.60GHz | 90nm |
400MHz |
2MB |
725 |
Pentium M ULV 1.10GHz | 130nm |
400MHz |
1MB |
718 |
Pentium M 1.50GHz | 90nm |
400MHz |
2MB |
715 |
Pentium M 1.30GHz | 90nm |
400MHz |
2MB |
713 |
There are also several updates on the Nocona roadmaps. In particular, the Nocona (Xeon) launch has moved from Q2'03 to Q3'03. Expect to wait a little longer to run an x86-64 compatible Xeon.
33 Comments
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ViRGE - Thursday, April 8, 2004 - link
Someone mind telling me what's going on with the Pentium-M ULV chips? They're giving the 1.1ghz/1MB PM-ULV a rating of 718, putting it ahead of the 1.5ghz/2MB PM, puting the 1.4ghz/2MB PM-LV ahead of the 1.6ghz/2MB PM, and other wierd things. The last digit makes sense(8=ULV, 3=LV, 0/5=normal), but the whole PM rankings seem sketchy at best.KristopherKubicki - Thursday, April 8, 2004 - link
Pumpkinierre, latency will suffer but thats the plan. The FSB is definitely 800MHz with DDR2-533 and DDR2-667 eventually.Kristopher
Pumpkinierre - Thursday, April 8, 2004 - link
On the new naming posting:The Pentium 3.8 and 4.0 are still 800 MHz. But these are supposed to be socket T with new mobos supporting DDR2. The only production DDR2 I've heard of is 533 which if run synchronously would quad pump at 1066MHz. So if the table is true, you'll have to underclock the DDR2 at DDR400 or asynchronously-not the best for performance. Else, socket T/Grantsdale/Alderwood is all a myth and Intel is sticking to Sckt478/i8x5.
amdfanboy - Thursday, April 1, 2004 - link
All I can say is why ?stephenbrooks - Thursday, April 1, 2004 - link
Am I the only one who's noticed the peculiar gap in the Celeron lineup - i.e. where's the 2.93GHz part? I think Intel skipped that one because nobody wants to buy something that's "just under" 3GHz :)THEonlyRightguard - Wednesday, March 31, 2004 - link
well ,instead of the xp 2800+, will they say the athlon xp 760+ ? it seems to me its a way to try and discredit comparison between amd and intel.TrogdorJW - Wednesday, March 31, 2004 - link
16 - But do you actually trust the sales people to know what they're talking about? I figure the chance of getting an honest, intelligent salesperson is about 50-50 these days, and only 25-75 if you go to a large store like Frys, CompUSA, Best Buy, etc. With these model numbers from both camps, computer salespeople are likely to become as bad as car salespeople. They'll just say whatever it takes to close the deal. :pSure, technophiles like most of the AT readers (looking away from CRAM) can be trusted to know what's good and what's not. For the common man, though, I don't know that it really matters. Computer performance really only matters now if you want to play games, do 3D modelling, or work on video content. For almost everything else, 2 GHz is currently fast enough and will remain so for the next two years at least. For businesses, even 1 GHz is usually fast enough.
Ignorance is bliss, they say, and I think there are a lot of people out there that prefer ignorance when it comes to computers.
Pumpkinierre - Wednesday, March 31, 2004 - link
The sales people are just going to quote the actual megahertz speed anyway, no matter the name or model no., as they do now for a-64/XP often at the buyer's request.KristopherKubicki - Wednesday, March 31, 2004 - link
SDA: A man can dream,... :-pCheck out what i wrote a few weeks ago:
http://www.anandtech.com/cpu/showdoc.html?i=1994
Kristopher
SDA - Wednesday, March 31, 2004 - link
Heh, "pick your battles wisely," says KristopherKubicki to CRAMITPAL. Sorry, Kris, but I don't think this is one you can take down with logic.What's AMD going to do about this, I wonder...? There'll be nothing to have Joe Consumer compare the XXXX+ to!