The History Of Pentium
yootje writes "ArsTechnica is running a story about the history of the Pentium processor. It starts with the original Pentium back in 1993, but it also handles the Pentium II and III. The article goes deep about how the processors are designed and work."
F00FC7C8 ?
I remember exploding many systems running many OSes with that...
Trolling using another account since 2005.
It makes me feel old that they now have a histroy for things I was around for the beginning of.
Five guys drinking fifths around a pentagram on the 5th floor of the pentagon on the pentecost.
the article doesn't tell us when we should expect the Hexium.
I remember when my mother brought home a 486 DX-2 66MHZ Packard Bell with something like 8 or 12 megs of ram.
we thought we were descended from kings, that day.
[nostalgia]
... when I used to lust, in equal measures, for the hottest girl in my class and the soon-to-be-launched Pentium!!
[/nostalgia]
*sigh*
One of the five guys mentioned above?
The owls are not what they seem
I had only been in the PC-building business for a few months when the Pentiums came out. I was always really nonchalant when it came to building computers and was certainly not gentle. However, everything I had built up to that point either had the CPU soldered onto the motherboard or someone else had done it because I had never seen a separate CPU.
When the first Pentium-based system arrived at my workstation to build I mounted the motherboard to the case and then put the CPU in place, but it didn't go in very well. I pulled it out and bent the pins back into place and put it in again. It felt like it went in okay.
I took the little arm thing and pulled down to secure it in place and heard a sound, but I thought it was okay... I had never done this before.
I put in the cards, drives and memory and fired the system up... blank screen and then... POP!!! and some smoke.
I didn't realize the CPU had a dot that corresponded with a notched corner indicating how to put the thing into place. From then on I started paying attention to things like that.
The Pentium made me mature as a technician... for about a week; then it was a contest to see how far we could launch them in the air. (kidding)
"I'm a karate man. Karate mans bleed on the inside."
I hear ya on that one, but I seem to remember (keep in mind I'm an old geezer in computer terms - 33) that to alleviate that, you could just upgrade the 'graphics accelerator'. I may be wrong, but couldn't a PII with a good ole' Diamond Viper V550 or V770 do the trick?
Plus the fact, that every new OS or software version magically requires more and more power. GRanted some of this is necessary, but how much is really necessary? Some people use ALL of the features of a package, but most don't even scratch the surface. Alot of folks consider me a computer 'Guru', and though I probably know more than most, I am far from it. It's like buying the Hyabusa, when all you want to be capable of doing is riding on two wheels
1978: 8086 processor is released
1979-Present: Regret
I think many of you will know exactly what I mean.
I tell my nephews that my pcs used to have a "turbo" button, and they look at me cross-eyed.
I don't need to read it, I've lived it.... :)
-m
http://www.invisik.com
"Pent-" is a Greek root for "5" and "-ium" is a Latin suffix often used for new elements. Thus the Pentium is the Fifth Element. As anybody who has seen the movie knows, the Fifth Element is a sexy red-head. That makes the Pentium the sexiest processor around.
Mathematics is not a crime.
I know it's not nice to want people to die... but I want those people to die.
Does it make you happy you're so strange?
No, no, the question was "who came up with the name Pentium?" not "how is US foreign policy formulated?".
k.
"In spite of everything, I still believe that people are really good at heart." - Anne Frank