With the advent of the Pentium processor in March 1993, Intel also introduced its first Pentium chipset: the 430LX chipset (code named Mercury). This was the first Pentium chipset on the market and set the stage as Intel took this lead and ran with it. Other manufacturers took months to a year or more to get their Pentium chipsets out the door. Since the debut of its Pentium chipsets, Intel has dominated the chipset market. Table 4.14 shows the Intel Pentium motherboard chipsets. Note that none of these chipsets support AGP; Intel first added support for AGP in its chipsets for the Pentium II/Celeron processors.
Note PCI 2.1 supports concurrent PCI operations, enabling multiple PCI cards to perform transactions at the same time for greater speed. Table 4.15 shows the Intel South Bridge chips used with Intel chipsets for Pentium processors. South Bridge chips are the second part of the modern Intel motherboard chipsets.
The Pentium chipsets listed in Tables 4.14 and 4.15 have been out of production for several years, and most computers that use these chipsets have been retired. For more information about these chipsets, see the PDF version of Chapter 4 in Upgrading and Repairing PCs, 16th Edition, included on this book's DVD. The development of non-Intel Pentium-class chipsets was spurred by AMD's development of its own equivalents to the Pentium processorthe K5 and K6 processor families. Although the K5 was not a successful processor, the K6 family was very successful in the low-cost (under $1,000) market and as an upgrade for Pentium systems. AMD's own chipsets aren't used as often as other third-party chipsets, but AMD's capability to support its own processors with timely chipset deliveries has helped make the K6 and its successors into credible rivals for Intel's processor families and has spurred other vendors, such as VIA, Acer Laboratories, and SiS, to support AMD's processors. Major third-party chipsets for Pentium-class processors include
Most computers that use these chipsets have been retired. For more detailed information about these chipsets, see Upgrading and Repairing PCs, 14th Edition, which is included on the disc packaged with this book. |