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CPU Better Recognize

Ask the Doctor LogoI have an Acer Aspire 5100 with a Phoenix BIOS. It came with an AMD Turion 64 single-core processor; I decided to upgrade to an AMD Turion 64X2 TL-64 dual-core processor. The computer recognizes everything but the processor model: In Device Manager it says “AMD processor model unknown.” The computer recognizes both cores of the CPU and gives the correct clock speed. How do I get my computer to recognize the processor model?

—Kevin Rush

First, Kevin, props for upgrading a notebook CPU. The problem you mention can happen if your BIOS revision predates the introduction of the CPU you’re using. To fix this, download the most recent BIOS revision for your notebook from Acer (http://us.acer.com/acer/service…)—as of press time, that is v3.13, released in March. Of course, it’s not the end of the world if your computer doesn’t recognize its processor’s name, as long as it gets the cores, clocks, and voltages right.

 

SUBMIT YOUR QUESTION Are flames shooting out of the back of your rig? First, grab a fire extinguisher and douse the flames. Once the pyrotechnic display has fizzled, email the doctor at doctor@maximumpc.com for advice on how to solve your technological woes.

 

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White Paper: Building a Modern CPU


From concept to design to manufacturing and everything in between, the processor inside your rig was years in the making

Designing and manufacturing a modern CPU is a huge project. It requires both backward compatibility and an understanding of where PC workloads are going in the future—a delicate balancing act made more difficult by the huge engineering staffs and massive dollar outlays involved. Let’s take a look at the steps needed to build a Core i7 or AMD Phenom II processor.

Before the manufacturing plant starts churning out chips, there are a few critical preliminary steps. Prior to the first circuit being laid out or the first simulation run, the designers need to know exactly what it is they’re designing. This phase takes input from many sources. Marketing gets involved, with predictions of what users will need when the CPU actually ships, usually two to four years in the future. Engineering and performance teams feed in billions of traces of actual applications being run on current-gen CPUs, so the designers can see how existing CPUs perform under real-world conditions.

The Design Process

After the specification phase, the design phase begins in earnest. Design involves creating a design document, validating the design with simulations, and laying out the design.

The architecture team begins by defining how the CPU is supposed to work. How many registers will it have? What’s the power budget? How many cores? How much cache? These and thousands of smaller details are all ironed out in the design (Read more...)