View allAll Photos Tagged CPUs

Close-up of an old 486 CPU upside-down.

A series of three shots of a computer CPU cooler, with the flash in varying positions. This one, the second of the three, has the flash at the lower left of the lens, slightly below the surface's height. The 35mm film can is for scale. Taken in my "studio" in Albany, CA by a Nikon D610 at ISO 400 with a Nikkor 28-80mm ƒ 3.3-5.6 AF-D G lens. A Nikon SB-300 flash was used with the SC-28 sync cord

A stacked image of a wafer full of CPU die's (I believe they are IBM CPU die's). Reversed 24mm on D300.

These are IBM's Power6 CPUs. They are dual-core and runs at 5GHz. Very fast, very hot, and very power hungry. These goes into the IBM 9119-FHA, largest of the Power6 model machines. Each "PU Book" houses 4 of these CPUs and each 9119-FHA can house 8 "Book"; making each 9119-FHA capable of running 64 CPUs. Quite impressive.

 

We are looking at getting Power7 machines (9119-FHB) when they are available and they can house 128 CPUs with each running at 2 "hyper-threads". Going to be quite a massive computing platform!

Why is it like this?

IBM 1992 PPC601FD-066-1

19506004KZ

TOSHIBA TMPZ84C00AP-6 JAPAN9129EFI

1963 Ford Lotus Cortina.

 

Registered in March 1983.

noisy intel cpu fan,

november 2006

AMD CPU. Taken with a Canon 1000D, 100 mm Macro at f/3.2

Intel Pentium Processor with MMX!

 

Gosh how intel CPUs have moved on!

 

Did not make my 365 but still posted.

Intel Pentium (P54C) 120 MHz (60x2).

NEC JAPAN

D70136AL-16

V33A

9129KK701

Even the chip nobody looks at looks awesome.

CPU core shot from above isolated on a white background.

Parts (Expansion connectors) for the Southern Cross 1 single-board Z80 computer.

foto de la luz de la cpu movida intencionalmente con el obturador abierto em mayor tiempo que permite mi camara compacta

this is a 20 core xeon btw

My new CPU Cooler. Just need a decent cpu to sit under it.

Photo by Owen "O1kenobi" Long

Added some juice to the PC. Intel i7 4770K

 

Random floppies from early 90's PCs. Motherboards and such like had to be constantly fed with drivers in those days. The CPUs are left over from the machine getting upgraded.

This CPU was removed from a faulty Commodore Amiga 500. You can also find this CPU in the Atari ST range of computers.

 

The Motorola 68000 is a 16/32-bit CISC microprocessor core designed and marketed by Freescale Semiconductor (formerly Motorola Semiconductor Products Sector). Introduced in 1979 with HMOS technology as the first member of the successful 32-bit m68k family of microprocessors, it is generally software forward compatible with the rest of the line despite being limited to a 16-bit wide external bus. After three decades in production, the 68000 architecture is still in use.

 

Don't forget to checkout www.retrocomputers.eu for more info about my retro computer collection.

MCST

Elbrus-8SV

 

МЦСТ

Эльбрус-8СB

 

Moscow Center of SPARC Technologies(MCST)

ExpLicit Basic Resources Utilization Scheduling (ELBRUS)

Gen5-VLIW µarch

Yes, that is the stock Intel HSF, and yes, it's keeping the CPU at a mere 26c under low load (eg, web browsing).

Printed circuit board for the Southern Cross 1 single-board Z80 computer.

An AMD CPU shot from above with the pins visible.

One of my old processors.

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