- Haswell (microarchitecture) - Wikipedia
Intel officially announced CPUs based on this microarchitecture on June 4, 2013, at Computex Taipei 2013, [1] while a working Haswell chip was demonstrated at the 2011 Intel Developer Forum [2] Haswell was the last generation of Intel processor to have socketed processors on mobile
- Products formerly Haswell - Intel
Products formerly Haswell product listing with links to detailed product features and specifications
- Haswell - Microarchitectures - Intel - WikiChip
Haswell (HSW) is Intel 's microarchitecture based on the 22 nm process for mobile, desktops, and servers Haswell, which was introduced in 2013, became the successor to Ivy Bridge
- The truth about Intel’s Broadwell vs. Haswell CPU - PCWorld
Both laptops were similar, but Haswell CPUs required a wealth of new components such as chipset and voltage changes, so comparisons don’t really isolate just the CPU
- What Is Haswell? - Computer Hope
Haswell is the codename of a CPU (Central Processing Unit) architecture developed by Intel, first announced to the public on June 4, 2013 They are part of the Intel series 8 and series 9 chipsets
- HASWELL: THE FOURTH-GENERATION INTEL CORE PROCESSOR
Published by the IEEE Computer Society Haswell is a “tock”—a significant micro-architecture change over the previous-generation Ivy Bridge Haswell is built with an SoC design approach that allows fast and easy creation of derivatives and variations on the baseline
- Intel Haswell core - CPU世界
Haswell features in many respects are similar to Ivy Bridge The microprocessors have 2 or 4 CPU cores, up to 8 MB of L3 cache, dual-channel DDR3 memory controller, on-chip graphics controller, and support for all x86 instruction set extensions
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