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The logos can be opened with Adobe Illustrator, Macromedia Freehand, CorelDraw or Adobe Photoshop. All the logos are also available in format EPS.
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.............................. Intel Pentium 4
Logo and Trademark..............................
The Pentium 4 brand refers to Intel's single-core mainstream desktop and laptop CPUs introduced on November 20, 2000 (August 8, 2008 is the date of last shipments of Pentium 4s). They had the 7th-generation architecture - called NetBurst - which was the company's first all-new design since 1995, when the Intel P6 architecture of the Pentium Pro branded CPUs had been introduced. The NetBurst differed from the preceding Intel P6 - of CPUs branded Pentium III, II, etc. - by featuring a very deep instruction pipeline to achieve very high clock speeds (up to 4 GHz) limited only by max. power consumption (TDP) reaching up to 115 W in 3.6–3.8 GHz Prescotts and Prescotts 2M (a high TDP requires an additional cooling that can be noisy or expensive). In 2004, the initial 32-bit x86 instruction set of the Pentium 4 branded microprocessors was extended by the 64-bit x86-64 set.
Pentium 4 branded CPUs introduced the SSE2 and SSE3 instruction sets to accelerate calculations, transactions, media processing, 3D graphics, and games. They also integrated Hyper-Threading (HT), a feature to make one physical CPU working as two logical and virtual CPUs, and more other features. The Intel's flagship branded Pentium 4 also came in a low-end version branded Celeron (often referred to as Celeron 4), and a high-end derivative branded Xeon intended for multiprocessor servers and workstations. In 2005, the Pentium 4 was superseded by the Pentium D and Pentium Extreme Edition brands of dual-core CPUs.
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