VIA C7 (original) (raw)

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Central processing unit designed by Centaur Technology and sold by VIA Technologies

C7

C7-M 795 2.0 GHz
General information
Launched May 2005
Common manufacturer VIA Technologies
Performance
Max. CPU clock rate 1.0 GHz to 2.0 GHz
FSB speeds 400 MT/s to 800 MT/s
Cache
L1 cache 64 KiB instruction + 64 KiB data
L2 cache 128 KiB 32-way exclusive
Architecture and classification
Technology node 90nm
Instruction set x86-16, IA-32
Extensions MMX, SSE, SSE2, SSE3, PadLock (AES, RNG, SHA, PMM)
Physical specifications
Cores 1
Sockets Socket 479nanoBGA2 400
Products, models, variants
Core name Esther (C5J)
History
Predecessor VIA C3
Successor VIA Nano

The VIA C7 is an x86 central processing unit designed by Centaur Technology and sold by VIA Technologies.

The C7 delivers a number of improvements to the older VIA C3 cores but is nearly identical to the latest VIA C3 Nehemiah core. The C7 was officially launched in May 2005, although according to market reports, full volume production was not in place at that date. In May 2006 Intel's cross-licensing agreement with VIA expired and was not renewed, which was the reason for the forced termination of C3 shipments on March 31, 2006, as VIA lost rights to the Socket 370.

EPIA PX10000G Pico-ITX Motherboard

A 1 GHz C7 processor with 128kB of cache memory is used in VIA's own PX10000G motherboard which is based on the proprietary Pico-ITX form factor. The chip is cooled by a large heatsink that covers most of the board and a small 40mm fan.

In early April 2008 the schoolroom-use oriented, ultra-portable HP 2133 Mini-Note PC family debuted with an entirely VIA-based, 1.0, 1.2 and 1.6 GHz C7-M processor portfolio, where the lowest speed model is optimized for running an SSD-based 4GB Linux distribution with a sub 500pricetag,whilethemiddletiercarries[WindowsXP](/wiki/Windows500 price tag, while the middle tier carries [Windows XP](/wiki/Windows%5FXP "Windows XP") and the top model comes with [Windows Vista](/wiki/Windows%5FVista "Windows Vista") Business, factory default. HP chose the single-core VIA C7-M CPU in order to meet the already fixed 500pricetag,whilethemiddletiercarries[WindowsXP](/wiki/Windows499 starting price, even though Intel's competing Atom processor line debuted on 2 April 2008.

VIA C7-M Mobile Processor Logo

The C7 is sold in five main versions:

The Esther (C5J) is the next evolution step of the Nehemiah+ (C5P) core of the VIA C3 line-up.

New Features of this core include:

  1. ^ "FAQ on Green Computing & ROHS - VIA Technologies, Inc". VIA Connect. 2007-11-21. Archived from the original on 2007-11-21. Retrieved 2024-08-04.
  2. ^ Shilov, Anton. "VIA Denies Intel Pentium M Bus Licensing". X-bit labs. Archived from the original on 2007-05-13. Retrieved 2007-04-23.
  3. ^ "Detailed Platform Analysis in RightMark Memory Analyzer. Part 12: VIA C7/C7-M Processors". Pricenfees.com. Retrieved 2007-03-12.