Low End Mac Reader Specials
TypeStyler For Mac OS X is Now Shipping! Download The Free Fully Functional 60 Day Tryout at www.typestyler.com
OWC: Get the Right Memory / Ram for your Mac. Top Quality, Competitive Prices, Lifetime Warranty. Expert Support and Video Installation Guidies too! 4.0GB Matched Sets from $87.99, Options up to 32GB. Click here
Don't install Parallels to play poker online! Poker Mac will show you how
to download and install a native Mac poker application such as Full
Tilt Poker Mac.
Laptop Hardware Provided by TechRestore - Overnight Mac & iPod Repairs.
Compare products like desktop computers, apple laptops, apple macs, and LCD Monitors side by side! All the information and reviews to make the best purchasing decision for new mobile phones, sat nav systems, or MP3 players. The Ciao online shopping community makes searching products easy for you.
Low End Mac's Online Tech Journal
Yonah, Merom, and Conroe: Confused by Intel's Code Names?
- 2006.03.17
Ed Hurtley is a former Intel employee. He shares the history of Intel's CPU code names and what future Intel CPUs will deliver.
With the ongoing switch to Intel CPUs, Apple fans have been forced to learn a whole new batch of code names. Intel is famous for using code names for each of its processors, which, unlike Apple's code names, are publicly used by Intel executives, often years in advance of a product's release.
For example, the current crop of Intel Macs uses a processor that went by the code name "Yonah" during development. This processor now goes by the names Core Duo and Core Solo, depending on the configuration. Coming up are a trio of related processors code named "Merom", "Conroe", and "Woodcrest".
What do these names mean?
First, a bit of Intel history. During early days of processor development, Intel's CPUs didn't have code names, they just had model numbers. 4004, 8088, 80286, etc.
Since a random string of numbers can't be trademarked, Intel decided to come up with names for them. The first attempt at this was to shorten the processor's model number. Thus, the 80486 became the i486DX - not very interesting, but it could be trademarked.
During development of their fifth generation processor, Intel not only did away with the model number as a public name, but as a code name as well.
As marketing hadn't yet come up with a good public name for the upcoming fifth generation CPU, Intel engineers named the chip the P5. Later, marketing came up with the name Pentium™.
At about this time, Intel broke processor development into two groups - one group based in California, the other in Oregon - and code names took on place names. So the first Pentium II processor acquired the code name "Klamath" after a river in Oregon.
For many processor generations, processor cores were named after rivers in Oregon and later on for other locations where Intel had facilities.
After the release of the Pentium 4 Processor, Intel saw the need to develop a lower power processor for mobile use. They tasked this to their division in Haifa, Israel.
This team was so successful with their design, the Pentium M (code name "Banias") that Intel eventually decided to abandon the Pentium 4 line for a new core designed as a hybrid combining features from both the Pentium 4 and Pentium M lines.
This new line's first series of chips will be Merom, Conroe, and Woodcrest.
Back to the present. We have the new Intel-based iMac, MacBook Pro, and Mac mini using Intel's Core Duo and Core Solo chips, code named Yonah. These chips are a direct descendent of the Banias/Pentium M chip.
The big advance that Yonah made over its predecessor, "Dothan", was dual-cores. In contrast to other dual-core designs, Yonah has a shared level 2 cache. Most current dual core designs are more like having two single processors attached on one piece of silicon. Yonah's design shares many internal components.
The next generation of processors are all based on one similar core with slightly different features for different uses.
Merom is the successor to the mobile Yonah chip. The big advancement it adds over Yonah is 64-bit mode.
Conroe is the chip aimed at the desktop market. It will replace the single-core Pentium 4 and its dual-core equivalent, the Pentium D. Based on the same core technology as Merom, it will have slower clock speeds than Pentium 4, yet be faster in actual processing capability (remember the core truth of the Megahertz Myth - a more efficient CPU can outperform a less efficient one even when the less efficient one runs at a faster clock speed).
Conroe will likely have less power-saving technologies to make it cheaper, although this hasn't yet been confirmed.
Woodcrest is the workstation/server chip. It will replace Intel's Xeon line of processors in the multiprocessor market. It also will likely have fewer power-saving features enabled and may (also not confirmed) support HyperThreading, a feature that is lacking on Intel's current mobile chips (as well as all but the most expensive dual-core desktop chips).
More information on Intel's code names can be seen on the Wikipedia
entry for Intel Core Microarchitecture, where you'll also see code
names like Penryn, Wolfdale, Clovertown, Perryville, and Dunnington.
Further reading: Intel Core Microarchitecture, Wikipedia
Recent Online Tech Journal Columns
- Optimized Software Builds Bring Out the Best in Your Mac, 06.30. Applications compiled for your Mac's CPU can load more quickly and run faster than ones compiled for universal use.
- Low End Mac's Safe Sleep FAQ, 06.15. What is Safe Sleep mode? Which Macs support it? How can you enable or disable it? And more.
- The Original Macintosh, 01.12. An in-depth look at the original Macintosh and how it shaped future Macs.
- The Innovative Lisa, 01.08. Apple's Lisa and how it paved the way for the Macintosh.
- More in the Online Tech Journal index.
Links for the Day
- Mac of the Day: iMac Core Duo, Jan. 2006 - The first Intel-based iMacs ran at 1.83-2.0 GHz, came with 17" and 20" displays.
- Group of the Day: Mac Pro List is for those using a Mac Pro.
- November 23 in LEM history: 99: Should I buy a USB card? - 01: Can a low-end Mac be an only Mac? - Palm Desktop without a PDA - CyberDog saves the day - 05: How Consumer Reports could compare Macs fairly - Speakers for your Mac - Living with the hi-res 15" PowerBook - Birth of the PowerBook - Daystar 1.9 GHz iMac G4 upgrade - 1.92 GHz PowerBook upgrade
- Support Low End Mac
Recent Content on Low End Mac
- Apple's Tablet an End Run Beyond Netbooks, Frank Fox, Stop the Noiz, 11.20. Whatever Apple has planned will leverage existing technologies while going beyond what its competitors can offer.
- i5 iMac Benchmarked, Mac mini 'Shouldn't Be Overlooked', Twitter Client for Classic Mac OS, and More, Mac News Review, 11.20. Also why Apple leaves the low end to others, 10.6.2 fixes video playback problem in 27" iMac, 3D Leopard and Snow Leopard performance, and more.
- Apple #4 in Reliability, Apple Tablet a Gadget for All?, HP's i7 Notebook Outdoes Mac Rivals, and More, The 'Book Review, 11.20. Also Flash 10.1 improves video on Hackintosh netbooks, thin-and-light notebooks impress, Windows XP finally on the way out, and more.
- NASA Chemical Sensor for iPhone, Smartphone Death Match, iPhone Earrings, and More, Ian R Campbell, 11.20. Also mobile phone dangers, new apps, GPS solution for iPod touch, new iPod and iPhone cases, and more.
- Replacing the Hard Drive in a Clamshell iBook, John Hatchett, Recycled Computing, 11.19. Yes, it is one of the most difficult Apple notebooks to disassemble and reassemble, but a 10 GB hard drive just will not do.
- IBM Model F: A Great Old Keyboard with an Outdated Layout, Tommy Thomas, Welcome to Macintosh, 11.19. Although it used a different technology than the revered IBM Model M keyboard, the Model F was a great keyboard in its own right.
- Soft Touch Keyboards, Wireless Mouse Options, Loving SeaMonkey 2, and More, Charles W. Moore, Miscellaneous Ramblings, 11.18. Also the future of browsing with PowerPC Macs and the multiple mouse input bug introduced with OS X 10.5.8.
- More links in our archive.
Recent Deals
- Best eMac Deals, 11.18. Used 1 GHz Combo, $100; SuperDrive, $269; 1.25 GHz Combo, $119; SD, $319; 1.42 GHz Combo, $289; SD, $498.
- Best Mac OS X 10.6 and Mac Box Set Deals, 11.18. "Snow Leopard", single user, $25; 5 users, $45; Mac Box Set, single user, $139; 5 users, $180; Server, $414. Shipping included.
- Best Xserve Deals, 11.18. Used 1 GHz dual G4, $649; 2.3 dual G5, $795; 3.0 4-core Xeon, $1,899; refurb 2.26 4-core, $2,499; new, $2,888; refurb 8-core, $2,999; new, $3,449; more.
- Best 15" MacBook Pro Deals, 11.17. Used 1.83 GHz, $750; 2.16, $800; 2.33, $900; refurb 2.4, $1,299; 2.53, $1,449; 2.66, $1,699; 2.8, $1,899; new 2.53, $1,579; 2.66, $1,799; more.
- Best Power Mac G4 and AGP Video Card Deals, 11.17. Used 400 MHz, $50; 933 MHz, $80; 500 dual, $60; 867 dual, $90; 1 GHz dual, $150; 1.25 GHz dual, $225; 1.42 GHz, $499.
- Best Mac OS X 10.5 Deals, 11.17. "Leopard" upgrade, $80; single user license, $135; 5 users, $173; Mac Box Set, 5 users, $230; Server, 10 users, $340; unlimited, $850. Shipping included.
- Best Mac mini Deals, 11.16. Used 1.42 GHz G4 mini, $379; 1.66 GHz Core Solo, $419; 2.0 Core 2, $450; new 2.26 GHz nVidia, $580; 2.53 GHz, $769; Server, $990.
- Best iBook G4 Deals, 11.16. Used 12" 1.07 GHz Combo, $210; 1.33 GHz, $298; 14" 1.33 GHz, $398; 1.42 GHz, $479; SuperDrive, $498.
- Best iPod shuffle Deals, 11.16. Used 1 GB, $35; 4 GB, $65; refurb 1 GB, $39; 2 GB, $59; new 2 GB, $55, 4 GB, $75. New and refurb prices include shipping.
- More deals in our archive.
About LEM | Support | Usage | Privacy | Contacts
Navigation
Used Mac Dealers
Apple History
Video Cards
Email Lists
Favorite Sites
MacSurfer
MacMinute
MacInTouch
MyAppleMenu
InfoMac
Macs Only!
The Mac Observer
Accelerate Your Mac
RetroMacCast
PB Central
MacWindows
The Vintage Mac
Museum
DealMac
DealsOnTheWeb
Mac2Sell
ramseeker
Mac Driver Museum
JAG's House
System
6 Heaven
System 7 Today
the pickle's Low-End
Mac FAQ
Abandonware
Petition
Mac vs. PC Info
Affiliates
The Apple
Store
Mac
Connection
B&H
MacMall
TechRestore
ExperCom
Crucial
Memory
batteries.com
Advertise
MacMinute
MacInTouch
MyAppleMenu
InfoMac
Macs Only!
The Mac Observer
Accelerate Your Mac
RetroMacCast
PB Central
MacWindows
The Vintage Mac
Museum
DealMac
DealsOnTheWeb
Mac2Sell
ramseeker
Mac Driver Museum
JAG's House
System 6 Heaven
System 7 Today
the pickle's Low-End
Mac FAQ
Abandonware
Petition
Mac vs. PC Info
Mac Connection
B&H
MacMall
TechRestore
ExperCom
Crucial Memory
batteries.com
