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10 Most Iconic Processors of My Lifetime: Difference between revisions
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Not necessarily "the best", but the most iconic, and those which set the tone of an age. | Not necessarily "the best", but the most iconic, and those which set the tone of an age. | ||
I was born in October 1980, and thus this list excludes the Intel 8086, Zilog Z80 and MOS 6502. In no particular order: | I was born in October 1980, and thus this list excludes the Intel 8086, Zilog Z80, and MOS 6502. In no particular order: | ||
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P5_(microarchitecture)#P55C Intel Pentium P55C] (October 1996) | * [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P5_(microarchitecture)#P55C Intel Pentium P55C] (October 1996) |
Revision as of 04:30, 12 April 2020
Not necessarily "the best", but the most iconic, and those which set the tone of an age.
I was born in October 1980, and thus this list excludes the Intel 8086, Zilog Z80, and MOS 6502. In no particular order:
- Intel Pentium P55C (October 1996)
- Motorola 68000 (November 1980)
- DEC Alpha 21164 EV5 (January 1995)
- Intel Core i7-2600K (January 2011)
- AMD Athlon Thunderbird (DDR 1.4GHz variant) (June 2000)
- NVIDIA G80 (October 2006)
- Cray X-MPU (1982)
- AMD Am386DX-40 (1991)
- PowerPC 603e (August 1996)
- MIPS R4000 (October 1991)