775 - but almost phased out
1156 - for coewi3 nad core i5
1366 - for flagship i7
there are others for the xeon server chips (i think) but that's business and enterprise not consumer
LGA1366, LGA771, and LGA775
LGA775, LGA1155, and LGA1366 are the most common Intel sockets. However there are several more still being used, and some that Intel has just recently released; such as LGA1156, LGA2011, LGA1248, and LGA1567.
Socket 1366 Socket 1156 Socket 1155 Socket LGA 2011 are in use presently
No. The Intel Pentium 4 line was produced for three sockets. The shortlived Socket 423, Socket 478, and LGA 775 (sometimes called Socket T).
Currently the answer is no, but historically Intel has been the leader in advancing processor technology. For quite some time there was no comptetition for chips with more than two cores, though recently AMD has released processors with three and four cores each, and thus catching up.
The three socket used is available at my house, ali's house and sani's house. it used for playing PS2, on the kipas, and play laptop. it take time for 2 days tq~
This is accomplished by several means, including two processing units installed on the same die (used by Pentium processors), a motherboard using two processor sockets (supported by Xeon processors), and two processors installed in the same processor housing (called dual-core processing).
Intel Core i7 is a family of several Intel desktop x86-64 processors, the first processors released using the Intel Nehalem microarchitecture and the successor to the Intel Core 2 family. All three current models and two upcoming models are quad-core processors.[1][2][3][4] The Core i7 identifier applies to the initial family of processors[5][6] codenamed Bloomfield.[7] Intel representatives state that the moniker Core i7 is meant to help consumers decide which processor to purchase as the newer Nehalem-based products are released in the future[8]. The name continues the use of the Core brand.[9] Core i7, first assembled in Costa Rica,[10] was officially launched on November 17, 2008[11] and is manufactured in Arizona, New Mexico and Oregon, though the Oregon plant is moving to the next generation 32 nm process.
The three Intel microprocessors that were launched in a row and latest (till June 5 when this question is answered) is Intel i3,Intel i5 and Intel i7.
Not necessarily. There have been three different sockets used for Pentium 4 processors (Socket 423, Socket 478, and LGA775). They are not interchangeable without special adapters. Even when pin-compatible, motherboard updates may be necessary for the processors to actually work.
Intel Core i7 is a family of several Intel desktop x86-64 processors, the first processors released using the Intel Nehalem microarchitecture and the successor to the Intel Core 2 family. All three current models and two upcoming models are quad-core processors.[1][2][3][4] The Core i7 identifier applies to the initial family of processors[5][6] codenamed Bloomfield.[7] Intel representatives state that the moniker Core i7 is meant to help consumers decide which processor to purchase as the newer Nehalem-based products are released in the future[8]. The name continues the use of the Core brand.[9] Core i7, first assembled in Costa Rica,[10] was officially launched on November 17, 2008[11] and is manufactured in Arizona, New Mexico and Oregon, though the Oregon plant is moving to the next generation 32 nm process.
There are WAY more than 3 brands of processors... Here is an incomplete list: Intel AMD POWER PowerPC Sun SPARC HP (PA-RISC) ARM VIA Motorola and more!