Arrandale
![The mobile Core i7-640M. The large die (on the left) is the [[iGPU]]+IMC+PCIe component and the small die (on the right) is the CPU.](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/ff/Intel_i7-640M.jpg)
Arrandale is the successor of the 45 nm Core-microarchitecture-based Penryn processor that is used in many of the mobile Core 2, Celeron and Pentium Dual-Core processors. While Penryn typically used both a north bridge and a south bridge, Arrandale already contains the major northbridge components, which are the memory controller, PCI Express bus for external graphics, integrated graphics, and the DMI interface, making it possible to build more compact systems.
The Arrandale processor package contains two dies: the 32 nm processor die with the I/O connections, and the 45 nm Intel HD Graphics (Ironlake) controller and integrated memory controller die. Physical separation of the processor die and memory controller die resulted in increased memory latency.
Arrandale was released on 7 January 2010, during CES 2010. The code name Arrandale is named after its namesake place in British Columbia. Provided by Wikipedia
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