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Pentium

Codenamed P5, the Pentium was released by Intel in 1993 as a replacement to the 80486 processor.  It is called Pentium because it is the fifth in the 80x86 line. It would have been called the 80586 had a US court not ruled that you cannot trademark a number. Below is a graphic illustration of the Pentium processor.

The Pentium processor is faster and more powerful than Intel's earlier chips, with about 3.1 million transistors, compared to 1.2 million on the 80486 and 275,000 on the 80386. The Pentium has a 32-bit access bus and a 64-bit data bus, and it can operate at speeds of 60MHz to 200MHz.

Since its initial release, all Intel processors released after the Pentium have been known as Intel Pentium processors, followed by a numerical number, such as Intel Pentium II, Intel Pentium III, etc...

Also see: Processor definitions

 

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