Complete list of processors that support SSE2? [closed]
I basically only find this online: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SSE2#CPU_support
But it seems quite incomplete (i.e. where's Intel Core)?
Is there a list of processors that support SSE2? Or how much its used/supported right now?
cpu specifications
closed as off-topic by Ramhound, Daniel B, Tetsujin, phuclv, Twisty Impersonator Dec 17 at 17:04
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Questions seeking product, service, or learning material recommendations are off-topic because they become outdated quickly and attract opinion-based answers. Instead, describe your situation and the specific problem you're trying to solve. Share your research. Here are a few suggestions on how to properly ask this type of question." – Daniel B, Tetsujin, Twisty Impersonator
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
|
show 3 more comments
I basically only find this online: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SSE2#CPU_support
But it seems quite incomplete (i.e. where's Intel Core)?
Is there a list of processors that support SSE2? Or how much its used/supported right now?
cpu specifications
closed as off-topic by Ramhound, Daniel B, Tetsujin, phuclv, Twisty Impersonator Dec 17 at 17:04
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Questions seeking product, service, or learning material recommendations are off-topic because they become outdated quickly and attract opinion-based answers. Instead, describe your situation and the specific problem you're trying to solve. Share your research. Here are a few suggestions on how to properly ask this type of question." – Daniel B, Tetsujin, Twisty Impersonator
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
on this forum, you'll find a list (better as in wiki) insanelymac.com/forum/topic/…
– batistuta09
Dec 17 at 15:59
A list like this would contain hundreds of processors. Questions seeking "lists" are out of scope here at Superuser, I am not aware of any Stack Exchange community, where a question like this would be within scope.
– Ramhound
Dec 17 at 16:00
why do you need to know that? All x86-64 CPUs support SSE2. And SSE2 support will never disappear in the future due to backward compatibility, unless Intel decided to change to a different architecture
– phuclv
Dec 17 at 16:27
@phuclv so only Intel and amd processor? And what about x86?
– markzzz
Dec 17 at 20:26
no, VIA also produced x86-64 CPUs, so obviously they must support SSE2. So did Transmeta. All CPUs after the first generation with SSE2 support must also have SSE2 support, like Intel Netburst onward except a few exceptions, mainly old embedded CPUs en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SSE2#CPU_support but the main thing is that there's no need to know the list of all SSE2-enabled CPUs. You need to state why you want that
– phuclv
Dec 18 at 1:57
|
show 3 more comments
I basically only find this online: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SSE2#CPU_support
But it seems quite incomplete (i.e. where's Intel Core)?
Is there a list of processors that support SSE2? Or how much its used/supported right now?
cpu specifications
I basically only find this online: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SSE2#CPU_support
But it seems quite incomplete (i.e. where's Intel Core)?
Is there a list of processors that support SSE2? Or how much its used/supported right now?
cpu specifications
cpu specifications
asked Dec 17 at 15:48
markzzz
3531721
3531721
closed as off-topic by Ramhound, Daniel B, Tetsujin, phuclv, Twisty Impersonator Dec 17 at 17:04
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Questions seeking product, service, or learning material recommendations are off-topic because they become outdated quickly and attract opinion-based answers. Instead, describe your situation and the specific problem you're trying to solve. Share your research. Here are a few suggestions on how to properly ask this type of question." – Daniel B, Tetsujin, Twisty Impersonator
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
closed as off-topic by Ramhound, Daniel B, Tetsujin, phuclv, Twisty Impersonator Dec 17 at 17:04
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Questions seeking product, service, or learning material recommendations are off-topic because they become outdated quickly and attract opinion-based answers. Instead, describe your situation and the specific problem you're trying to solve. Share your research. Here are a few suggestions on how to properly ask this type of question." – Daniel B, Tetsujin, Twisty Impersonator
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
on this forum, you'll find a list (better as in wiki) insanelymac.com/forum/topic/…
– batistuta09
Dec 17 at 15:59
A list like this would contain hundreds of processors. Questions seeking "lists" are out of scope here at Superuser, I am not aware of any Stack Exchange community, where a question like this would be within scope.
– Ramhound
Dec 17 at 16:00
why do you need to know that? All x86-64 CPUs support SSE2. And SSE2 support will never disappear in the future due to backward compatibility, unless Intel decided to change to a different architecture
– phuclv
Dec 17 at 16:27
@phuclv so only Intel and amd processor? And what about x86?
– markzzz
Dec 17 at 20:26
no, VIA also produced x86-64 CPUs, so obviously they must support SSE2. So did Transmeta. All CPUs after the first generation with SSE2 support must also have SSE2 support, like Intel Netburst onward except a few exceptions, mainly old embedded CPUs en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SSE2#CPU_support but the main thing is that there's no need to know the list of all SSE2-enabled CPUs. You need to state why you want that
– phuclv
Dec 18 at 1:57
|
show 3 more comments
on this forum, you'll find a list (better as in wiki) insanelymac.com/forum/topic/…
– batistuta09
Dec 17 at 15:59
A list like this would contain hundreds of processors. Questions seeking "lists" are out of scope here at Superuser, I am not aware of any Stack Exchange community, where a question like this would be within scope.
– Ramhound
Dec 17 at 16:00
why do you need to know that? All x86-64 CPUs support SSE2. And SSE2 support will never disappear in the future due to backward compatibility, unless Intel decided to change to a different architecture
– phuclv
Dec 17 at 16:27
@phuclv so only Intel and amd processor? And what about x86?
– markzzz
Dec 17 at 20:26
no, VIA also produced x86-64 CPUs, so obviously they must support SSE2. So did Transmeta. All CPUs after the first generation with SSE2 support must also have SSE2 support, like Intel Netburst onward except a few exceptions, mainly old embedded CPUs en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SSE2#CPU_support but the main thing is that there's no need to know the list of all SSE2-enabled CPUs. You need to state why you want that
– phuclv
Dec 18 at 1:57
on this forum, you'll find a list (better as in wiki) insanelymac.com/forum/topic/…
– batistuta09
Dec 17 at 15:59
on this forum, you'll find a list (better as in wiki) insanelymac.com/forum/topic/…
– batistuta09
Dec 17 at 15:59
A list like this would contain hundreds of processors. Questions seeking "lists" are out of scope here at Superuser, I am not aware of any Stack Exchange community, where a question like this would be within scope.
– Ramhound
Dec 17 at 16:00
A list like this would contain hundreds of processors. Questions seeking "lists" are out of scope here at Superuser, I am not aware of any Stack Exchange community, where a question like this would be within scope.
– Ramhound
Dec 17 at 16:00
why do you need to know that? All x86-64 CPUs support SSE2. And SSE2 support will never disappear in the future due to backward compatibility, unless Intel decided to change to a different architecture
– phuclv
Dec 17 at 16:27
why do you need to know that? All x86-64 CPUs support SSE2. And SSE2 support will never disappear in the future due to backward compatibility, unless Intel decided to change to a different architecture
– phuclv
Dec 17 at 16:27
@phuclv so only Intel and amd processor? And what about x86?
– markzzz
Dec 17 at 20:26
@phuclv so only Intel and amd processor? And what about x86?
– markzzz
Dec 17 at 20:26
no, VIA also produced x86-64 CPUs, so obviously they must support SSE2. So did Transmeta. All CPUs after the first generation with SSE2 support must also have SSE2 support, like Intel Netburst onward except a few exceptions, mainly old embedded CPUs en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SSE2#CPU_support but the main thing is that there's no need to know the list of all SSE2-enabled CPUs. You need to state why you want that
– phuclv
Dec 18 at 1:57
no, VIA also produced x86-64 CPUs, so obviously they must support SSE2. So did Transmeta. All CPUs after the first generation with SSE2 support must also have SSE2 support, like Intel Netburst onward except a few exceptions, mainly old embedded CPUs en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SSE2#CPU_support but the main thing is that there's no need to know the list of all SSE2-enabled CPUs. You need to state why you want that
– phuclv
Dec 18 at 1:57
|
show 3 more comments
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
The answer is literally the first 3 sentences at the point you linked in the Wikipedia article:
SSE2 is an extension of the IA-32 architecture, based on the x86 instruction set. Therefore, only x86 processors can include SSE2. The AMD64 architecture supports the IA-32 as a compatibility mode and includes the SSE2 in its specification
This means virtually every modern Intel and AMD CPU supports SSE2.
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
The answer is literally the first 3 sentences at the point you linked in the Wikipedia article:
SSE2 is an extension of the IA-32 architecture, based on the x86 instruction set. Therefore, only x86 processors can include SSE2. The AMD64 architecture supports the IA-32 as a compatibility mode and includes the SSE2 in its specification
This means virtually every modern Intel and AMD CPU supports SSE2.
add a comment |
The answer is literally the first 3 sentences at the point you linked in the Wikipedia article:
SSE2 is an extension of the IA-32 architecture, based on the x86 instruction set. Therefore, only x86 processors can include SSE2. The AMD64 architecture supports the IA-32 as a compatibility mode and includes the SSE2 in its specification
This means virtually every modern Intel and AMD CPU supports SSE2.
add a comment |
The answer is literally the first 3 sentences at the point you linked in the Wikipedia article:
SSE2 is an extension of the IA-32 architecture, based on the x86 instruction set. Therefore, only x86 processors can include SSE2. The AMD64 architecture supports the IA-32 as a compatibility mode and includes the SSE2 in its specification
This means virtually every modern Intel and AMD CPU supports SSE2.
The answer is literally the first 3 sentences at the point you linked in the Wikipedia article:
SSE2 is an extension of the IA-32 architecture, based on the x86 instruction set. Therefore, only x86 processors can include SSE2. The AMD64 architecture supports the IA-32 as a compatibility mode and includes the SSE2 in its specification
This means virtually every modern Intel and AMD CPU supports SSE2.
edited Dec 17 at 17:08
answered Dec 17 at 16:01
Keltari
50.8k18117169
50.8k18117169
add a comment |
add a comment |
on this forum, you'll find a list (better as in wiki) insanelymac.com/forum/topic/…
– batistuta09
Dec 17 at 15:59
A list like this would contain hundreds of processors. Questions seeking "lists" are out of scope here at Superuser, I am not aware of any Stack Exchange community, where a question like this would be within scope.
– Ramhound
Dec 17 at 16:00
why do you need to know that? All x86-64 CPUs support SSE2. And SSE2 support will never disappear in the future due to backward compatibility, unless Intel decided to change to a different architecture
– phuclv
Dec 17 at 16:27
@phuclv so only Intel and amd processor? And what about x86?
– markzzz
Dec 17 at 20:26
no, VIA also produced x86-64 CPUs, so obviously they must support SSE2. So did Transmeta. All CPUs after the first generation with SSE2 support must also have SSE2 support, like Intel Netburst onward except a few exceptions, mainly old embedded CPUs en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SSE2#CPU_support but the main thing is that there's no need to know the list of all SSE2-enabled CPUs. You need to state why you want that
– phuclv
Dec 18 at 1:57