![K6](_derived/ak6.htm_cmp_cpuscore110_vbtn.gif)
![K6-2](_derived/ak62.htm_cmp_cpuscore110_vbtn.gif)
![K6-2+](_derived/ak62p.htm_cmp_cpuscore110_vbtn.gif)
![K6-III](_derived/ak63.htm_cmp_cpuscore110_vbtn.gif)
![K6-III+](_derived/ak63p.htm_cmp_cpuscore110_vbtn.gif)
![Duron](_derived/ad.htm_cmp_cpuscore110_vbtn.gif)
![Athlon](_derived/ak7.htm_cmp_cpuscore110_vbtn.gif)
![Athlon 4](_derived/aa4.htm_cmp_cpuscore110_vbtn.gif)
![Athlon MP](_derived/aamp.htm_cmp_cpuscore110_vbtn.gif)
![Athlon XP](_derived/aaxp.htm_cmp_cpuscore110_vbtn.gif)
![Sempron](_derived/as.htm_cmp_cpuscore110_vbtn.gif) |
April 1997: MMX enhanced,
AMD's first major competitor to Intel's Pentium MMX. |
May
1998: With 3DNow!, AMD's popular answer to the Pentium II. |
April
2000: Brings PowerNow!
to notebooks. |
February
1999: Tri-level cached Pentium-III
wannabe. |
April
2000: Brings PowerNow!
and a large, integrated cache to notebooks. |
June
2000: Athlon-based, on-die cached,
Celeron sinker. |
August
1999: AMD's cache-doubled, floating-point enhanced, real
Pentium-III killer. |
May
2001: First mobile Athlon. Good-bye K6-x... |
June
2001: Athlon duals up for workstations
and servers. |
October
2001: AMD marketeers combat Intel's 'MegaHertz Myth'
with 'QuantiSpeed'. |
August 2004:
Duron's successor is unveiled |
|
Choose a CPU type above for
chip info and price lists, or return to find your CPU
Scorecard benchmark score from the drop-down list below: |