• Geekazine
Day in Tech History
Tech History Blog & Podcast
  • Home
  • About
    • 365 Days of Tech History
    • What is a Podcast?
    • Privacy Policy
  • iTunes
  • Donate
  • Birthdays
  • Apple Keynotes – All the Past Ones
  • Contact
    • Contact
  • Subscribe
pentium-pro[1]

Day in Tech History/ Intel

November 1, 1995: Intel Pentium Pro Announced

Jeffrey Powers @geekazine 1101, bit architecture, bus speed, ceo, coin purse, ethics, fictional character, francois bancilhon, generation processor, hello kitty, historical podcast, ibm pcjr, intel, japanese bobtail, japanese bobtail cat, Linux, linux developer, micron process, Microsoft, next generation, nigerian government, nov 1, novell, november 1, pentium pro, sanrio company, shimizu, steve ballmer, tech history, technology podcast 0 Comments November 1, 2024

Tweet
Pin it
Play

Subscribe! Spotify | RSS | More

Intel Pentium Pro

Intel announced in 1995 the next generation processor – the Pentium Pro. Unlike the Pentium, the Pentium Pro was a chip designed for 32-bit architecture, so Windows 95 and Windows NT could run true.  The processor ran between 150-200 MHz, with a bus speed of 60 MHz (for 150 or 180 MHz processor) or 66MHz (for 166 or 200 MHz processor). The processor used a .35 micron process and prices started at $974 to $1989.

Subscribe to the Day in Tech History

Subscribe to Day In Tech History:

RSS Feed - iTunes - Android - Spotify - iHeartRadio

Facebook - 

- RSS Bandwidth by Cachefly Get a 14 Day Trial

- Join me on Patreon and support Day in Tech History

  • 2008 – Novell Open SUSE Community elected board
  • 1996 – DEC sues AltaVista
  • IBM PCjr Released
  • 1983 – The IBM PCjr is released

Related Posts

0606

Day in Tech History /

June 6, 2005: Apple Switches to Intel

0601

Intel /

June 1, 1979: the 8088 Microprocessor

0605

Day in Tech History /

June 5, 1983: Coleco Adam Computer

‹ October 31st, 2008: Bitcoin Paper Authored › November 2, 1931: DuPont DuPrene (Neoprene) Introduced
Subscribe by Email

Want to Talk Tech History?

Jeffrey Powers would love to come on your show and discuss the events of technology history. Feel free to call him @ 608-205-4378. You can also Contact Jeffrey:


Archives

Podnova Player button

Back to Top

On Geekazine

  • How to Use Yoast SEO: Breadcrumbs, Cornerstone Content & AI Explained
  • When It Works, When It Fails – ACASIS TB501 Pro Thunderbolt 5 Tested
  • Expand Your Stream Deck with Virtual Buttons – No Extra Hardware Needed!
  • NUU N20 is Low Cost, AI Capable, and All Business
  • Photoshop on the Web: This SaaS is Ready for Primetime
  • Home
  • About
    • 365 Days of Tech History
    • What is a Podcast?
    • Privacy Policy
  • iTunes
  • Donate
  • Birthdays
  • Apple Keynotes – All the Past Ones
  • Contact
    • Contact
  • Subscribe