Xeon Processor
Xeon is designed for Internet and large transactional database servers as well as for engineering, graphics, and multimedia applications that require moving a lot of data around quickly. Xeon is the high end of the Pentium line (Celeron is the low end).
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- A faster L1 and L2 cache, either 512 Kbytes or 1 Mbytes, that runs at the same 400 MHz clock speed of the processor.
- A faster bus to carry data between the processor, RAM, and I/O devices. The 450NX PCI set is a chipset that works at a 100 MHz clock speed and supports up to 8 GB of extended data output RAM memory.
- A larger Accelerated Graphics Port ( AGP ) chip set called the 440GX AGP set that also runs at 100 Mhz. It supports 2 GB of 100 MHz SDRAM.
- An extended server memory architecture that provide for 36-bit addresses, allowing up to 64 GB of physical memory to be addressed.
- Everything pre-mounted in a motherboard package for faster manufacturing
Typically,
a computer with a Xeon microprocessor would use a Windows NT, NetWare, or UNIX
operating system. Xeon-based systems are expected to offer competition to Sun
Microsystems, Silicon Graphics, and others in the workstation market, but its
primary market is expected to be the mid-range server.