Misplaced Pages

Mobile processor

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Mobile CPU) Processor found in mobile devices
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page. Please help improve this article by introducing citations to additional sources.
Find sources: "Mobile processor" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (September 2021)
An Intel Pentium Mobile, clocked at 300 MHz (1998)

A mobile processor is a microprocessor designed for mobile devices such as laptops, and cell phones.

A CPU chip is designed for portable computers to run fanless, under 10 to 15W, which is cool enough without a fan. It is typically housed in a smaller chip package, but more importantly, in order to run cooler, it uses lower voltages than its desktop counterpart and has more sleep mode capability. A mobile processor can be throttled down to different power levels or sections of the chip can be turned off entirely when not in use. Further, the clock frequency may be stepped down under low processor loads. This stepping down conserves power and prolongs battery life.

Today's CPUs are usually more than just a single unit. They are split into "cores", each acting like an individual CPU. They also use "threading", allowing each core to do multiple tasks, amplifying the performance.

In laptops

One of the main characteristics differentiating laptop processors from other CPUs is low-power consumption, however, they are not without tradeoffs; they also tend to not perform as well as their desktop counterparts.

The notebook processor has become an important market segment in the semiconductor industry. Notebook computers are a popular format of the broader category of mobile computers. The objective of a notebook computer is to provide the performance and functionality of a desktop computer in a portable size and weight.

Cell phones and PDAs use "system on a chip" integrated circuits that use less power than most notebook processors.

While it is possible to use desktop processors in laptops, this practice is generally not recommended, as desktop processors heat faster than notebook processors and drain batteries faster.

Examples

Current

Former

References

  1. "Fanless computer boards are pushing 15W to the limit". 15 October 2015.
  2. Ahmad, Saalim. "CPU vs GPU: A Deep Dive into Their Roles & Differences". Future Bytes. saalim ahmad. Retrieved 2023-06-26.
  3. "Intel Processor Letter Meanings [2022 Guide]". 10 January 2022.
Processor technologies
Models
Architecture
Instruction set
architectures
Types
Instruction
sets
Execution
Instruction pipelining
Hazards
Out-of-order
Speculative
Parallelism
Level
Multithreading
Flynn's taxonomy
Processor
performance
Types
By application
Systems
on chip
Hardware
accelerators
Word size
Core count
Components
Functional
units
Logic
Registers
Control unit
Datapath
Circuitry
Power
management
Related


Stub icon

This microcomputer- or microprocessor-related article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: