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The benefit is super fast memory access for the graphics core, but slower memory access for the CPU core. Remember the memory controller that Nehalem so graciously integrated? Clarkdale kicks it off die again. It’s not all rosy with Clarkdale unfortunately. Nearly every desktop and laptop sold in 2010 will need one of these 45nm GMA die, so the fabs indeed have something to do.
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The 32nm fabs are ramping up with CPU production and the 45nm fabs need something to do. We don’t get on-die graphics yet because Intel still hasn’t switched over to its make-everything-at-the-best-process-ever strategy. Next year we’ll see Sandy Bridge bring the graphics on-die, but until then we have Intel’s tried and true multi-chip-package to tide us over. That’s right, meet the first (er, second) Intel CPU with on-chip graphics. Take Nehalem, use 32nm transistors, add in some new instructions for accelerating encryption/decryption, and you’ve got the makings of Westmere.Ĭlarkdale uses a dual-core Westmere and sticks it next to a 45nm Intel GMA die. Technically Clarkdale isn’t Nehalem, it’s Westmere. Today we meet Intel's first 32nm CPUs, codename Clarkdale, designed to specifically target that $100 - $200 market. Either through aggressive pricing on quad-core CPUs or the 元-cache-less Athlon II line, AMD controls the $100 - $200 market. The choice was simple.įrom $100 to $200, your best bet has been AMD.
#OVERCLOCK INTEL CORE I3 M330 UPDATE#
Instead we were left with a choice between Penryn, the update to Intel’s 2006 Conroe architecture, or Phenom II, AMD’s low-cost Nehalem competitor.
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Even with P55 motherboard prices down at the magical $99 marker, Intel relinquished control of the $100 - $200 CPU market without a Nehalem to compete down there. It came to us as a high end quad-core processor and took a full year to make it to more affordable motherboards in the form of Lynnfield. We first met Nehalem on November 3rd, 2008. I swear this is the longest it’s taken for an Intel architecture to penetrate the market.
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