Intel Core 2 Duo

This page will show all objects that classify as Intel Core 2 Duo. The Core 2 Duo has been made by Intel, a company that has been around since 1968 and is today's biggest processor company. They started with the i4004, a microprocessor for calculators and such, but got popular with the 8086 and 8088. IBM used that processor in it's IBM-PC and clones of the IBM PC obviously used the same processor as well. Thanks to this evolution Intel could find it's way on the market and develop successors of the 8086 all up to todays Core i7.

View processor details Intel Core 2 Duo E6300 'QPHC'
Intel Core 2 Duo E6300 'QPHC'

By launching the Core 2 Duo CPU's, Intel shook the processing world awake. AMD had, compared to the Pentium 4 and Pentium D, superior products with the Athlon64 and Athlon64 X2. With the Core 2 Duo Intel didn't have hot-running sluggish CPU's anymore. Instead they sort of reclaimed the 'best-CPU'-throne.

Before the launch of the Core 2 Duo, at July 27 2006, some samples already hit the market. These samples indicated that the Core 2 Duo was fast and a good overclocker. Consider having an E6400 (2,13GHz) running at 3,2GHz in the third-quarter of 2006! More than enough CPU's of that time are able to do this without problems.

The Core-microarchitecture has new key features that improves performance. Parts of it are based on the Pentium-M (that could do more per MHz than the Pentium 4 and was a lot cooler) but then reorganized. Using shared L2-cache (Advanced Smart Cache) there aren't huge delay's in cache access and techniques like Advanced Digital Media Boost can process 128-bit SSE2 instructions in one cycle rather than two (Pentium 4/D needed two cycles for this). Intel's Core 2 Duo has more new interesting features which I'm not going to mention here ;). The result of all the new techniques is that the Core 2 Duo can do a lot more per MHz than the old Pentium 4 while being energy-efficient and those two things are very important. > Read more