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  1. Intel Core i7 es una familia de procesadores 10 y 8 núcleos de la arquitectura Intel x86-65. Los Core i7 son los primeros procesadores que usan la microarquitectura Nehalem de Intel y es el sucesor de la familia Intel Core 2 .

  2. Nehalem / n ə ˈ h eɪ l əm / is the codename for Intel's 45 nm microarchitecture released in November 2008. It was used in the first generation of the Intel Core i5 and i7 processors, and succeeds the older Core microarchitecture used on Core 2 processors . [3]

    Codename
    Market
    Cores(threads)
    Socket
    Jasper Forest
    EmbeddedDesktop
    1 (2)
    LGA1366
    Lynnfield
    PerformanceDesktop
    4 (4)
    LGA1156
    Lynnfield
    PerformanceDesktop
    4 (8)
    LGA1156
    Bloomfield
    EnthusiastDesktop
    4 (8)
    LGA1366
  3. Nehalem, parte de la primera generación, es el nombre en clave utilizado para designar a la microarquitectura de procesadores Intel, sucesora de la microarquitectura Intel Core. El primer procesador lanzado con la arquitectura Nehalem ha sido el procesador de sobremesa Intel Core i7, lanzado el día 15 de noviembre de 2008 en Tokio y el 17 de ...

  4. The Westmere architecture has been available under the Intel brands of Core i3, Core i5, Core i7, Pentium, Celeron and Xeon . Technology. Westmere's feature improvements from Nehalem, as reported: Native six-core ( Gulftown) and ten-core ( Westmere-EX) processors. [1]

  5. The Intel Core microarchitecture (provisionally referred to as Next Generation Micro-architecture, and developed as Merom) is a multi-core processor microarchitecture launched by Intel in mid-2006. It is a major evolution over the Yonah , the previous iteration of the P6 microarchitecture series which started in 1995 with Pentium Pro .

  6. Intel 7 process Atom microarchitecture iteration after Tremont. First Atom class core with AVX and AVX2 support. Alder Lake : hybrid processor, succeeds Rocket Lake and Tiger Lake, released on November 4, 2021.

  7. Intel microarchitecture (Nehalem) was designed from the ground up to capitalize on all the advantages of Intel’s industry-leading 45-nanometer (nm) Hi-k metal gate silicon technology. This process technology is one of the biggest advancements in fundamental transistor design in 40 years.