From WikiChip
Difference between revisions of "amd/athlon 64"
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| isa = x86-64 | | isa = x86-64 | ||
| microarch = K8 | | microarch = K8 | ||
− | | word = | + | | word = 64 bit |
| proc = 130 nm | | proc = 130 nm | ||
| proc 2 = 90 nm | | proc 2 = 90 nm |
Revision as of 10:00, 16 November 2016
Athlon 64 | |
Athlon 64 logo | |
Developer | AMD |
Manufacturer | AMD |
Type | Microprocessors |
Introduction | 2003 (announced) September 23, 2003 (launch) |
Architecture | Performance desktop x86 chips |
ISA | x86-64 |
µarch | K8 |
Word size | 64 bit 8 octets
16 nibbles |
Process | 130 nm 0.13 μm , 90 nm1.3e-4 mm 0.09 μm , 65 nm9.0e-5 mm 0.065 μm
6.5e-5 mm |
Technology | CMOS |
Clock | 1,000 MHz-3,200 MHz |
Socket | Socket 754, Socket 939, Socket 940, Socket AM2, Socket AM2+ |
Succession | |
← | → |
Athlon XP | Athlon 64 X2 |
Athlon 64 was a family of performance 64-bit x86 microprocessors designed by AMD and introduced in 2003 as a successor to the Athlon XP family. This was the second family (after Opteron) to introduce processors based on x86-64. Athlon 64 processors competed directly against Intel's Pentium 4 processors.
Facts about "Athlon 64 - AMD"
designer | AMD + |
first announced | 2003 + |
first launched | September 23, 2003 + |
full page name | amd/athlon 64 + |
instance of | microprocessor family + |
instruction set architecture | x86-64 + |
main designer | AMD + |
manufacturer | AMD + |
microarchitecture | K8 + |
name | Athlon 64 + |
process | 130 nm (0.13 μm, 1.3e-4 mm) +, 90 nm (0.09 μm, 9.0e-5 mm) + and 65 nm (0.065 μm, 6.5e-5 mm) + |
socket | Socket 754 +, Socket 939 +, Socket 940 +, Socket AM2 + and Socket AM2+ + |
technology | CMOS + |
word size | 32 bit (4 octets, 8 nibbles) + |