by Anton Shilov
10/20/2003 | 10:09 AM
There are a lot of controversy statements in respect of Intel’s 90nm process these days, as the company quietly pushed the release of its next generation Intel Pentium 4 with SSE3 aka Prescott processor into 2004. Some sources indicate that there are very bad problems with Intel’s 90nm Strained Silicon technology, while others tell us that there are no really tangible issues at all.
<%BANNER[article]%>“…I think you are going to find out in the next month that Intel has a lot more design and production issues with
A source close to Intel, also wishing to remain anonymous, claimed: “The issue is not with 90nm yields. I cannot say they are as good as the 0.13 micron process, but they are good. Intel in
We do know that Intel Celeron processors manufactured at 90nm fabrication technology sport 256KB of L2 cache, 533MHz PSB, 2.80 or 3.06GHz core-clocks; while the first Intel Pentium 4 with SSE3 technology processors should boast with 1MB of L2, 800MHz Quad Pumped Bus and core-speeds from 2.80 to 3.40GHz. In general, Prescott Pentium 4 chips are a bit more complex than Celeron processors and may be harder to pump up the speed.
Historically Intel offered cut-down versions of its Pentium processors as Celeron CPUs; furthermore, there are a lot of assumptions about Intel selling its fully-featured Pentium cores with a part of cache and possibly something else disabled under Celeron brand-name. In case the claims about Celeron and Pentium identity are accurate, the mentioned 90nm Celeron parts allude to us that there are no major problems neither with
Intel Celeron processors based on