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When Core was introduced in 2006, Intel described it as a merger of both {{\\|P6}} and {{\\|NetBurst}}. When scrutinizing the details, it's fairly clear that little was actually borrowed from {{\\|NetBurst}}. In fact, it wasn't until Intel's entirely new microarchitecture {{\\|Sandy Bridge}} that a true merger presented itself.
 
When Core was introduced in 2006, Intel described it as a merger of both {{\\|P6}} and {{\\|NetBurst}}. When scrutinizing the details, it's fairly clear that little was actually borrowed from {{\\|NetBurst}}. In fact, it wasn't until Intel's entirely new microarchitecture {{\\|Sandy Bridge}} that a true merger presented itself.
 
{{expand section}}
 
{{expand section}}
 
== Die Shot ==
 
 
===Dual-core Core===
 
* Woodcrest
 
* 143 mm²
 
* 291,000,000 transistors
 
* [[65 nm process]]
 
* 2 cores
 
 
: [[File:intel woodcrest die shot.jpg|300px]]
 
  
 
== Documents ==
 
== Documents ==

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codenameCore +
designerIntel +
first launchedApril 2006 +
full page nameintel/microarchitectures/core (client) +
instance ofmicroarchitecture +
instruction set architecturex86-64 +
manufacturerIntel +
microarchitecture typeCPU +
nameCore +
phase-outMay 2009 +
process65 nm (0.065 μm, 6.5e-5 mm) +