Intel's top Pentium chip, introduced in late 2000. The successor to the Pentium III, the Pentium 4 features the NetBurst micro-architecture (see NetBurst). All Pentium 4 chips are single core ...
This was around the time that Intel was chasing gigahertz with the Pentium 4 Netburst chip and AMD was having some early ...
Although chips including Intel's Pentium 4 series could be overclocked beyond 4GHz before the arrival of AMD's Bulldozer series, it was an AMD's FX chip that marked the debut of the first factory ...
By comparison, the 90nm Prescott-based Pentium 4 521 was set at the same frequency and had an 84w TDP while the upcoming 65nm Core 2 Duo had a maximum TDP of 65w when clocked at 3GHz.
When Pabst continued to press the issue, Intel took Tom's Hardware "out of the loop" and refused to brief the site on its forthcoming Pentium 4 technology. Essentially, Intel blackballed Tom's ...
It offered a slow base clock of 133 MHz, but even that's over 33% faster than the Pentium 4 2.2 (Northwood). The CPU featured ...