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Released in March 1994, Socket 5 was primarily designed for second-gen Intel P5 Pentium processors. However, it was also ...
In 1997, we had the 350nm Intel Pentium II and AMD K6 CPUs; Russia's first lithography efforts will be nearly 30 years behind current technology. This is what a 350nm lithography machine looks ...
Then, [Necroware] went full Turbo and smashed this author’s favorite single core CPU of all time into the socket: the AMD K6-2 450, a CPU well beyond the original capabilities of the board.
By 1998, Super Socket 7 emerged as an enhanced version of Socket 7, mainly to support newer AMD K6-2 and K6-III processors. It added support for a 100 MHz front-side bus and AGP graphics ...