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OLIn 2004, CPUs built on 90 nm (nanometer) technology represented a major leap in semiconductor manufacturing. Here’s what was inside those processors:
Features of 90 nm CPUs (2004)
Transistor Size: Each transistor had a minimum feature size of 90 nanometers, allowing billions of them to fit on a chip. This was a shrink from the previous 130 nm process.
Intel’s Prescott Pentium 4: Intel introduced its Pentium 4 processors on 90 nm technology in early 2004. These chips were based on the NetBurst microarchitecture.
Hyper-Threading Technology: Enabled one physical processor to act like two logical processors, improving multitasking and parallel workloads.
Execution Trace Cache: Stored decoded instructions to speed up execution, reducing the need to repeatedly fetch and decode instructions.
Larger Caches & Buffers: Compared to earlier generations, these CPUs had bigger internal caches and buffers to improve throughput.
Clock Speeds: Prescott chips reached higher frequencies (up to 3.8 GHz), though they were notorious for high power consumption and heat output.
Why It Mattered
Performance Boost: More transistors meant more complex features like larger caches and better branch prediction.
Manufacturing Milestone: The 90 nm node was a stepping stone toward even smaller processes (65 nm in 2005, 45 nm in 2007).
Challenges: Heat dissipation and power leakage became significant issues, influencing future CPU design toward efficiency rather than just raw clock speed.
Would you like me to break down the internal architecture diagram of a 90 nm Pentium 4 (Prescott) so you can see how its components were arranged?
This is probably the last time you see me, so follow me for more advice @oldworld.exe
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