Why Were Pentium 2's on Cards? [Byte Size] | Nostalgia Nerd

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With the Pentium II, Intel designed a CPU and cache which remained closely integrated, but were mounted on a printed circuit board, called a Single-Edged Contact Cartridge (SECC). In this episode of Byte size, I discuss the reasons behind this switch and also go into details on cache operations in the Pentium Pro, Xeon and Celeron processors, and how they differed from the Pentium II model.

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♜Resources♜
Pentium 2 images courtesy of Wikipedia/Wikimedia and public domain imagery.
Windows '95 Processor graph discovered through Tom's Hardware - http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/empire-strikes-back,23.html
Information courtesy of "The Complete PC Upgrade & Maintenance Guide, Ninth Edition" by Mark Minasi.







Tags:
Pentium 2
Pentium Pro
Pentium II
Xeon
Celeron
Pentium 2 card