An iterative refresh of Raptor Lake-S desktop processors, called the 14th generation of Intel Core, was launched on October 17, 2023.
[1][2] CPUs in bold below feature ECC memory support when paired with a motherboard based on the W680 chipset according to each respective Intel Ark product page.
Members of the 3000 family: Bus width 2n bits data/address (depending on number n of slices used) Pentium II Xeon (chronological entry) XScale (chronological entry – non-x86 architecture) Pentium 4 (not 4EE, 4E, 4F), Itanium, P4-based Xeon, Itanium 2 (chronological entries) Itanium (chronological entry – new non-x86 architecture) Itanium 2 (chronological entry – new non-x86 architecture) Westmere Not listed (yet) are several Broadwell-based CPU models:[20] Note: this list does not say that all processors that match these patterns are Broadwell-based or fit into this scheme.
Intel discontinued the use of part numbers such as 80486 in the marketing of mainstream x86-architecture processors with the introduction of the Pentium brand in 1993.
However, numerical codes, in the 805xx range, continued to be assigned to these processors for internal and part numbering uses.