From WikiChip
Difference between revisions of "intel/cores/diamondville"
(Created page with "{{intel title|Diamondville|core}} {{core | name = Diamondville | image = | caption = | image size = | image 2 = | capti...") |
(No difference)
|
Revision as of 01:58, 4 April 2017
| Edit Values | |
| Diamondville | |
| General Info | |
| Designer | Intel |
| Manufacturer | Intel |
| Introduction | April 18, 2007 (announced) April 2, 2008 (launched) |
| Microarchitecture | |
| ISA | x86-64 |
| Microarchitecture | Bonnell |
| Word Size | 64 bit 648 octets 16 nibbles |
| Process | 45 nm 0.045 μm 4.5e-5 mm |
| Technology | CMOS |
| Succession | |
Diamondville is thee core name for Intel's first generation of Atom processors based on the Bonnell microarchitecture. Those ultra-low power chips were manufactured on Intel's 45 nm process and were specifically aimed for nettops, netbooks, and entry/value desktops. Diamondville effectively replaced Stealey in the netbooks and entry-level desktops segment.
Facts about "Diamondville - Cores - Intel"
| designer | Intel + |
| first announced | April 18, 2007 + |
| first launched | April 2, 2008 + |
| instance of | core + |
| isa | x86-64 + |
| manufacturer | Intel + |
| microarchitecture | Bonnell + |
| name | Diamondville + |
| process | 45 nm (0.045 μm, 4.5e-5 mm) + |
| technology | CMOS + |
| word size | 64 bit (8 octets, 16 nibbles) + |