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Q: What is the advantage and disadvantage of Pentium 80586 microprocessor?
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Is Pentium 4 is Intel 8086 microprocessor?

No. The Pentium IV is not an Intel 8086. It is closer to the 80586.


What is the brand name of the 80586 microchip developed by Intel?

Cray Y-MPC 90


How many acres is 80586 sq feet?

80586 sq ft = 1.85 acres.


What is the brand name of the 80586 microchip?

the brand name of the 80586 microchip developed by INTEL is


What is the history of AMD microprocessor?

AMD was a major supplier of various integrated circuits: logic, DRAM, the 2900 family bitslice bipolar microprocessor chipset, etc. However they lacked a single chip MOS microprocessor like those made by Intel, Motorola, Zilog, Texas Instruments, National Semiconductor, etc. When Intel encountered a problem meeting demand for their 80386 single chip MOS microprocessor they sought out another chip manufacturer with available fabrication facilities. At the time AMD had surplus fabrication facilities and Intel and AMD quickly reach an agreement where Intel would provide AMD with the masks and other manufacturing details for the 80386 and AMD would licence some of their patents to Intel. The two companies would then share the market and sales of the 80386. When Intel designed their 80486 single chip MOS microprocessor, they had already expanded their fabrication facilities enough that they would not need help from AMD to make enough 80486 microprocessors to meet demand. However AMD expected that the original 80386 agreement demanded Intel provide masks and other manufacturing details for successive Intel designed microprocessors (beginning with the 80486). Intel refused and the case went to court. Meanwhile AMD began designing an 80486 microprocessor clone on their own. Intel claimed in the court case that AMD could not do that as 80486 was a trademark, but the court pointed out that trademark law does not permit trademarking of numbers. This allowed both Intel and AMD to manufacture, market, and sell their own independently designed versions of the 80486 microprocessor. When Intel designed their 80586 single chip MOS microprocessor, because of the court decision that numbers could not be trademarked Intel chose to use a word which could be trademarked instead of 80586 and (somewhat unimaginatively) made up the word Pentium for the 80586. Of course AMD designed their own 80586 clone independently (as they had done with the 80486) and made up their own word as a trademark for it. Ever since then when Intel has enhanced the x86/Pentium architecture, AMD has independently designed a clone supporting the new architectural features. However AMD has their own implementation ideas to improve and optimize performance, so sometimes the Intel microprocessors have had better performance and other times the AMD microprocessors have had the better performance.


How may acres are in 80586 sq ft?

Exactly 1.85 acres.


What is Intel CPU?

I assume you mean an Intel Microprocessor. Intel has made many different microprocessors, starting with the 4 bit Intel 4004 in 1971 followed by the 8 bit Intel 8008 in 1972. The modern Intel Microprocessor used in PC is a 32 bit or 64 bit Microprocessor whose architecture is derived from the 8 bit Intel 8008. Some of the other Intel Microprocessor in this path of architectural evolution are the 8 bit Intel 8080, the 8 bit Intel 8085, the 16 bit Intel 8086 (and the 16 bit Intel 8088 with 8 bit external multiplexed databus), the 16 bit Intel 80186, the 16 bit Intel 80286, the 32 bit Intel 80386 (first 80x86 Microprocessor to implement virtual memory), the 32 bit Intel 80489, the 32 bit Intel Pentium (was originally to have been the 80586, but you cannot Trademark numbers only words and Intel wanted a Trademark at that time to protect their IP rights). Intel also built many other Microprocessors with unrelated architectures (e.g. 3000 series bitslice, 80432, 80860, 80960).


What is the difference between an Intel Pentium and an Intel Pentium III?

The difference is in P4 the new technology "Hyper Threading" has been implemented, the number of pins has been increased and cache memory has been increased. ~ Pentium III is an 80686. Pentium 4 is an 80786. For Pentium 4, you have to find programs that are compiled for the Pentium 4 or else the performance will be low. All Intel processors use the ISA instruction set developed back in the early 80s. First it was an 8-bit instruction set. Then there was the 16-bit. Next came the 32-bit instruction set, and the processors since the 80386 use it. Each processor model designates with the 80x86 notation. Each model increase in features and sometimes performance. Now the x86 computer industry is advancing towards the 64-bit instruction set. 8086 = 8-bit, 80186 = 8-bit, 80286 = 16-bit, 80386 = 32-bit, 80486 = 32-bit, 80586 = 32-bit = Pentium, Pentium MMX, K5, K6, K6-II, K6-III 80686 = 32-bit = Pentium Pro, Pentium II, Pentium III, Athlon, Athlon XP, Opteron*, Athlon FX-51*, Athlon FX-53*, Athlon 64* 80786 = 32-bit = Pentium 4 * = 32-bit/64-bit If you have compiled a program for 686 architectures, only the processors equal to it or above it can execute it. If you have compiled a program with MMX/SSE/3DNOW instructions, processors that have it will be optimized and processors that do not have those instructions will not be optimized. ~ Speed.


What is the difference between the Intel Pentium III and the Intel Pentium 4?

The difference is in P4 the new technology "Hyper Threading" has been implemented, the number of pins has been increased and cache memory has been increased. ~ Pentium III is an 80686. Pentium 4 is an 80786. For Pentium 4, you have to find programs that are compiled for the Pentium 4 or else the performance will be low. All Intel processors use the ISA instruction set developed back in the early 80s. First it was an 8-bit instruction set. Then there was the 16-bit. Next came the 32-bit instruction set, and the processors since the 80386 use it. Each processor model designates with the 80x86 notation. Each model increase in features and sometimes performance. Now the x86 computer industry is advancing towards the 64-bit instruction set. 8086 = 8-bit, 80186 = 8-bit, 80286 = 16-bit, 80386 = 32-bit, 80486 = 32-bit, 80586 = 32-bit = Pentium, Pentium MMX, K5, K6, K6-II, K6-III 80686 = 32-bit = Pentium Pro, Pentium II, Pentium III, Athlon, Athlon XP, Opteron*, Athlon FX-51*, Athlon FX-53*, Athlon 64* 80786 = 32-bit = Pentium 4 * = 32-bit/64-bit If you have compiled a program for 686 architectures, only the processors equal to it or above it can execute it. If you have compiled a program with MMX/SSE/3DNOW instructions, processors that have it will be optimized and processors that do not have those instructions will not be optimized. ~ Speed.


What is the difference between an Intel Pentium III and an Intel Pentium 4?

The difference is in P4 the new technology "Hyper Threading" has been implemented, the number of pins has been increased and cache memory has been increased. ~ Pentium III is an 80686. Pentium 4 is an 80786. For Pentium 4, you have to find programs that are compiled for the Pentium 4 or else the performance will be low. All Intel processors use the ISA instruction set developed back in the early 80s. First it was an 8-bit instruction set. Then there was the 16-bit. Next came the 32-bit instruction set, and the processors since the 80386 use it. Each processor model designates with the 80x86 notation. Each model increase in features and sometimes performance. Now the x86 computer industry is advancing towards the 64-bit instruction set. 8086 = 8-bit, 80186 = 8-bit, 80286 = 16-bit, 80386 = 32-bit, 80486 = 32-bit, 80586 = 32-bit = Pentium, Pentium MMX, K5, K6, K6-II, K6-III 80686 = 32-bit = Pentium Pro, Pentium II, Pentium III, Athlon, Athlon XP, Opteron*, Athlon FX-51*, Athlon FX-53*, Athlon 64* 80786 = 32-bit = Pentium 4 * = 32-bit/64-bit If you have compiled a program for 686 architectures, only the processors equal to it or above it can execute it. If you have compiled a program with MMX/SSE/3DNOW instructions, processors that have it will be optimized and processors that do not have those instructions will not be optimized. ~ Speed.


Why 80586 microprocesser could not comes after 80486 microprocesser?

Because a number could not be copyrighted. Thus Intel went to names for their CPUs instead of numbers to prevent clones from carrying the same designation.


What do you mean x86-processor-based computer?

An x86-processor-based computer is any computer that has a processor that runs on Intel's 32-bit instructions* or AMD's 64-bit instructions**.*The term "x86" refers to the 32-bit architecture that is based on Intel's 8086 processors and its derivatives and extensions (8086, 80186, 80286, 80386, 80486, Pentium ["80586"], Pentium Pro/Celeron/Core [80686]). In certain multi-architectural builds of certain programs, x86 is also called i386.**x86_64 is an extension to x86 that supports 64-bit instructions. Initially pioneered by AMD, and later integrated into later [usually multicore] processors by Intel for cross-compatibility. In certain multi-architectural builds of certain programs, x86_64 is also called amd64 or Intel64.