Atom
Intel Atom is the brand name for a line of ultra-low-voltage IA-32 and Intel 64 (x86-64) from Intel, originally designed in 45 nm Complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) with subsequent models, using a 32 nm process. Atom is mainly used in netbooks, nettops, embedded applications ranging from health care to advanced robotics, and mobile Internet devices (MIDs).
Bonnell is a CPU microarchitecture used by Intel Atom processors which can execute up to two instructions per cycle. Like many other x86 microprocessors, it translates x86 instructions (CISC instructions) into simpler internal operations (sometimes referred to as micro-ops, effectively RISC style instructions) prior to execution. The majority of instructions produce one micro-op when translated, with around 4% of instructions used in typical programs producing multiple micro-ops. The number of instructions that produce more than one micro-op is significantly fewer than the P6 and NetBurst microarchitectures.
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N475 Specification Details |
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Please note that modern processors have more value as the processor itself than a collective value.
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