Break a long sentenance into two.

Add Clackamas Technology and Yamhill.  Remove references that Intel
used to call EM64T "64-bit extension technology" as that is what I've
recently seen Intel call it on banners in their booth at trade shows.
This commit is contained in:
David E. O'Brien 2004-12-16 18:24:49 +00:00
parent 5b0e5516c2
commit e67bd2d40e
Notes: svn2git 2020-12-08 03:00:23 +00:00
svn path=/www/; revision=23241

View file

@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" [
<!ENTITY base CDATA "..">
<!ENTITY date "$FreeBSD: www/en/platforms/amd64.sgml,v 1.8 2004/05/05 06:44:32 obrien Exp $">
<!ENTITY date "$FreeBSD: www/en/platforms/amd64.sgml,v 1.9 2004/09/12 19:28:15 hrs Exp $">
<!ENTITY title "FreeBSD/amd64 Project">
<!ENTITY email 'freebsd-amd64'>
<!ENTITY % includes SYSTEM "../includes.sgml"> %includes;
@ -15,9 +15,9 @@
href="http://www.amd.com/">AMD's</a> AMD64 and
<a href="http://developer.intel.com/technology/64bitextensions/">Intel EM64T</a>
(Extended Memory 64-bit Technology) architecture. The AMD64
architecture was previously known as x86-64 or ``Hammer,''
and the Intel EM64T architecture was previously known as
64-bit extension technology or IA-32e.</p>
architecture was previously known as x86-64 or ``Hammer.''
The Intel EM64T architecture was previously known as
IA-32e, Clackamas Technology (CT), and Yamhill.</p>
<p>The AMD Opteron&trade; and AMD Athlon&trade; 64 processors
use the AMD64 architecture.</p>