This is a substantial proclamation as quad-core CPU costs have actually fallen over the years and are right away relatively affordable no subject what country you occupy. Without promote ado let's assume a look at the new CPU. AMD declared two AMD Athlon II X4 CPU this morning. Both of these CPUs characteristic a 200MHz bus with a 2000MHz HT link and storage defend for some DDR2 (up to 1,066 MT/s) and DDR3 (up to 1,333 MT/s).

So, what is escaping to arrive at these CPUs so inexpensive? Well, it seems that AMD has behaved away with all of the L3 cache on the AMD Athlon II X2 series. They did this by behaving a repeat obtaining method in order to get the cores. AMD sent us an e-mail confirming that they are building AMD Athlon II X4 CPUs that are based on both the novel 'Propus' 169mm die and the older 'Deneb' 258mm die size.

Name:  AMD Athlon II X4 620 and Athlon II X4 630 CPU ..jpg
Views: 74
Size:  6.3 KB

When an AMD Deneb core (Phenom II X4 CPU) fails the L3 cache test the L3 cache is invalided, so it essentially gets an Athlon II X4 CPU. This builds good business sense as a CPU isn't constituting wasted due to a trouble with the L3 cache. rather, the fallout only gets stamped with a contribution number; in this case it will turn an Athlon II.

That means they are constructed by GLOBALFOUNDARIES at Fab 1 in Dresden, Germany using the 45nm DSL SOI (silicon-on-insulator) procedure that all the early higher-end Phenom II CPU use. assuming a closer look at the AMD Athlon II X4 630 CPU with CPU-Z 1.52.2 you can see that this is a quad-core CPU based off the 'Propus' core once again, but the clock frequency is 2.8GHz. The CPU is multiplier locked only like the Athlon II X4 620 CPU, but it has a higher 14x multiplier.