AMD K6-III | |
K6-III marking logo | |
Developer | AMD |
Manufacturer | AMD |
Type | Microprocessors |
Introduction | October 16, 1998 (announced) February 22, 1999 (launch) |
Architecture | IA-32 with MMX and 3DNow+ |
ISA | IA-32 |
µarch | K6-III |
Word size | 32 32 bit
4 octets 8 nibbles |
Process | 180 nm 0.18 μm , 250 nm1.8e-4 mm 0.25 μm
2.5e-4 mm |
Technology | CMOS |
Clock | 333 MHz-450 MHz |
Package | CPGA-321 |
Socket | Socket 7, Super Socket 7 |
Succession | |
← | → |
K6-2 | Athlon |
K6-III was a family of 32-bit x86 microprocessors introduced by AMD in February of 1999 as a successor to the K6-2 family. K6-III was an attempt by AMD to stretch the life of the original K6 (a NexGen design) for a bit longer while they worked on K7 (Athlon).
Overview
AMD's K7 was well into development in 1998 when they announced a partnership with Motorola (now Freescale). Athlon was to be released in mid-1999. The K6-III served as a temporary solution, introducing a number of small modification to the microarchitecture which resulted in a performance increase. The significant increase in performance is a result of a new large on-die L2$. Previously, systems incorporated an L2$ on the motherboard which ranged from 512 KB to 2MB. This changed with K6-III which added 256 KB of level 2 cache on-die. AMD branded this setup "TriLevel Cache", moving the on-motherboard cache to level 3. By June of 1999, AMD moved on to Athlon.
As with K6-2, K6-III offers 3DNow!, MMX, and 3DNow+ which contained a number of new DSP instructions. K6-III, however, did not incorporated any new Intel MMX instructions.
designer | AMD + |
first announced | October 16, 1998 + |
first launched | February 22, 1999 + |
full page name | amd/k6-iii + |
instance of | microprocessor family + |
instruction set architecture | IA-32 + |
main designer | AMD + |
manufacturer | AMD + |
microarchitecture | K6-III + |
name | AMD K6-III + |
package | CPGA-321 + |
process | 180 nm (0.18 μm, 1.8e-4 mm) + and 250 nm (0.25 μm, 2.5e-4 mm) + |
socket | Socket 7 + and Super Socket 7 + |
technology | CMOS + |
word size | 32 bit (4 octets, 8 nibbles) + |