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Intel's
latest Pentium 4 processors bring long-awaited 64-bit support
to the desktop, along with -- in the 600 series -- notebook-style
cooling technology.
Intel
has introduced a new family of Pentium 4 chips, the 600 series,
and also added another member that's clocked at 3.73GHz to its
high-end Pentium 4 Extreme Edition line. You can expect to see
these new chips later this month in a wide range of desktops --
mainstream and performance PCs for both home and business use.
The new chips underscore the fact that today's new processors
are about added features and not a simple increase in raw clock
speed.
More
significantly, the Pentium 4 600 chips and the 3.73GHz Pentium
4 Extreme Edition bring Intel up to speed with competitors AMD
and Apple, both of which introduced 64-bit desktop processors
in 2003. Intel brought 64-bit support to its Xeon server chips,
but until now, the company has let its desktop CPUs linger in
32-bit mode. To be fair, nobody is running 64-bit applications
on the desktop today, and Microsoft has been dragging its feet
with a 64-bit version of Windows, though the company has stated
that its 64-bit OS -- available now as a Release Candidate --
will be released in the first half of this year.
With
the new chips, you'll be able to run the 64-bit applications of
tomorrow and go beyond the current 4GB memory maximum of 32-bit
systems. PCs will be more powerful because they'll be able to
carry more memory in addition to using more advanced CPUs. And
with demanding, more sophisticated 64-bit programs on the horizon,
this additional horsepower is sure to be put to use. Dubbed Extended
Memory 64-bit Technology (EM64T), the IA-32 extension closely
resembles the AMD 64-bit architecture. Chips with EM64T will be
able to run today's 32-bit operating systems and applications,
and when 64-bit software begins to emerge, you'll have a platform
that will be able to make the leap.
Intel
has added a version of its SpeedStep technology to the Pentium
4 600 chips. SpeedStep provides longer battery life for Intel
notebooks and keeps heat down, too. Enhanced Intel SpeedStep Technology
(EIST) will power down the processor when you aren't using every
last megahertz in order to keep the chip from generating needless
heat. EIST is not featured on the high-end 3.73GHz Pentium 4 Extreme
Edition, since its owners are likely to require every last ounce
of performance from it.
Both
the Pentium 600 chips and the new Extreme Edition CPU provide
added security. When Windows XP SP2 was released last year, it
included a security feature call Data Execution Prevention (DEP)
that protects PCs against some viruses that exploit buffer overflows.
Trouble was, only newer AMD and a handful of Intel's Itanium server
chips supported the DEP feature, leaving your PC open to worms
such as MS Blaster and Sasser. The new Intel chips include an
Execute Disable Bit, which will let you enable DEP, adding another
layer of protection to your PC.
The
newly announced Intel chips are built on the 90-nanometer process
that was first introduced to the desktop with the Prescott-core
Pentium 4 chip released a year ago. Like the Prescott chips, the
600-series processors have an 800MHz bus and are compatible with
Socket 775 (LGA775) motherboards. The number of transistors has
increased from 125 million with Prescott to 169 million on both
the Pentium 4 600 chips and the 3.73GHz Pentium 4 Extreme Edition.
The new P4 EE chip also features a faster 1,066MHz bus that was
introduced last year on the 3.46GHz P4 EE.
Looking
ahead, Intel's next move for high-end desktop processors is expected
to occur in the coming months, with the launch of its first dual-core
processors.
source: Zdnet.co.uk
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