New Intel Trademark Filed 390
jmanforever writes "Reuters is reporting that 'Intel Inside VIIV' and 'Intel VIIV' were filed as U.S. trademarks. The question is, what does VIIV mean? Could this be the Roman numerals for 6-4 indicating a 64-bit chip, or could this be the Roman numeral five twice, separated by two lines, indicating the dual cores of the Pentium 5 chip?"
Pentium 6 (Score:5, Funny)
Or maybe it's Pentium M2, after the success of Pentium M series. VIIV = upside down M with a II in the middle.
Or maybe it's Penitum 5 Dual Core? "Pentium V, 2 Inside"
Or maybe it's just a marketing stunt? Similar to Google's trademark application "Google R2D2".
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Re:Pentium 6 (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Pentium 6 (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Pentium 6 (Score:2)
PENT-ium VEEV
Re:Pentium 6 (Score:4, Funny)
\m/
or
PENTIUM R0x0RZZZZ!!!!11oneone
Re:Pentium 6 (Score:5, Funny)
This suggests that AMD uses Emacs.
Re:Pentium 6 (Score:2, Funny)
will soon be releasing vi v. 4
Do you mean viviv ?
Re:Pentium 6 (Score:5, Funny)
Good thing those new Opterons are almost fast enough to run it...
Re:Pentium 6 (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Pentium 6 (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Pentium 6 (Score:5, Informative)
Also, Turkish words cannot have two identical vowels next to each other, going on what I remember about 4th Grade in a Turkish school.
Re:Pentium 6 (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Pentium 6 (Score:2, Funny)
Pronounced "Double-U Two" (Score:2)
Of course, this theory falls to pieces if Intel doesn't actually have a prospective "W" chip.
pentium 5 (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:pentium 5 (Score:2)
Instead they stick with the Pentium number and keep incrementing a number after it. Either they're too lazy/cheap to come up with another product name, or they have something else in mind.
At least they didn't call the Opteron the "Pentium Opteron".
-Z
Re:pentium 5 (Score:2)
yeah, I thought they shoulda been at Hexium too... considering their Pentium Pro (and later Celeron) chips were called 80686... They should be at Septium right now, because I b'lieve the P4 core is called 80786... wait, that's not true! look what I found [sandpile.org]:
Re:pentium 5 (Score:2)
Pentium MMX is i586 + MMX
Pentium Pro is i686
Pentium II is i686 + MMX
Re:pentium 5 (Score:5, Funny)
Pentium III is i686 + MMX + SSE
Pentium 4 is RISC on crack cocain
Pentium M is the result of a P4 knocking up a PIII
Re:pentium 5 (Score:5, Insightful)
That's like saying you're suprised Ford is still using the 'Mustang' name for some cars that have only loosest similarity to the first year Mustang. It's called 'Brand Awareness' and companies spend jillions on marketing campaigns to make consumers want [insert trademarked name here]. The name 'Pentium' is going to be used for as long as Intel can get mileage out of it.
Re:pentium 5 (Score:2, Interesting)
With the Pentium IV they should have gone through Hexium, Heptium and Octium. They would be planning for the Nonium right now. Coming up would be Decium, Hendecium, Dodecium and Triskaidekium. Considering that, I guess I understand why they just stuck with the Roman numerals.
Or could it be . . . (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Or could it be . . . (Score:3, Interesting)
It's probably for a quad-core p6.
Re:Or could it be . . . (Score:2)
Intel Patented 64-bit and Dual Cores? (Score:5, Funny)
Or did they patent a process where they do it all with mayonaisse, mustard and pickles?
Spelled wrong (Score:5, Funny)
Perhaps Intel has friends in high places... (Score:2)
It's all in the font. It's a dubya can't y'all see that!?
V\/V
Please excuse phoney U.S. accent. =D
Re:Perhaps Intel has friends in high places... (Score:5, Funny)
V\/V
Would that not be tripya?
I'm betting on (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:I'm betting on (Score:2)
Re:I'm betting on (Score:2)
My first thoughts (Score:3, Insightful)
I didn't think about the 5 II 5 interpretation, and I doubt the market who needs to know "intel inside" would understand the symbol either way.
In other news today (Score:5, Funny)
MMDCL
which is the roman numeral for the temperature their new chip will run.
Re:In other news today (Score:2)
Re:In other news today (Score:2)
Tungston?
OTOH... 2650 F will melt gold but not platinum.
So much for gold contacts on the chips. They will have to use platinum or tungston....
Re:In other news today (Score:2)
Re:In other news today (Score:2)
stackable design? (Score:4, Interesting)
does anyone know what they mean by stackable design?
is this supposed to be taken literally? stacking one CPU on top of the other?
or just some buzzwords that mean nothing that this implies?
Re:stackable design? (Score:2)
Sounds a little off the wall to me, but then so does the suggestion that the chips will "fly alon
Re:stackable design? (Score:4, Interesting)
That's my guess. Literally stacking cores not only would have terrible heat problems, but how do you deal with all those pins? 478 per core (the Pentium V will probably use even more than that) is 956 pins. But you would have to have a socket for those dual core chips, and another seperate socket for the single core chips. Complicated. Either that or you'd have to use 956 pin sockets for ALL chips and just not use half the pins. Again, complicated.
Natural dual/triple/quad/whatever core is my guess. Not hacked, but designed for it specifically.
Re:stackable design? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:stackable design? (Score:4, Informative)
I can't argue the fact (and won't) that AMD designed their Opteron for dual-core from its inception, due to the memory controller, and today's P4's and PM's are not. However, you really should read up on the Cedar Mill and Smithfield platforms that Intel has announced. Sure the first dual-core procs they'll release will be two Prescotts welded together (presumably by running them next to each other...), but the true "dual-core" procs they intend to sell are designed from the beginning to be dual-core. I've seen one of the Cedar Mill processors running in the debug lab, and trust me, it's running much faster than the current procs, plus it's dual-core, and it consumes less overall power than today's single proc (think 5 GHz, dual-core, ~90 watts, vs. 3.6 GHz PSC, ~110 watts) and does not suffer from the memory bus starvation that the Xeon's currently die from. Intel has their designs right for their dual-core line.
Re:stackable design? (Score:2)
Re:stackable design? (Score:2)
CVVC (Score:3, Funny)
Now known as the Civic.
Re:CVVC (Score:2)
Re:CVVC (Score:2)
While I stand corrected on CVCC... the CVCC had a 1500cc engine. 105cc would be be decent for a moped or small motorcycle but wouldn't power anything car sized.
Slashdot's new tag line (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Slashdot's new tag line (Score:3, Funny)
Slashdot - Now we are running low on stories. Someone post something quick !
Slashdot - Not really news. Might be someday.
Reminds me (Score:4, Interesting)
The official explanation is that '*' can stand for anything you consider your are (like artist).
Re:Reminds me (Score:2)
Re:Reminds me (Score:2)
If you read the Japanese pages, it's pronounced isuto, which is a Japanese way of pronouncing "ist" using their syllables. The * is silent.
Re:Reminds me (Score:2)
Re:Reminds me (Score:2)
gross conjecture (Score:4, Funny)
After this [slashdot.org] and this [slashdot.org] I'm forced to the conclusion that these three stories are three points on a grid forming a triangle corresponding with the location of Atlantis. Could it mean Slashdot editors are from another planet? Could it mean open source is to the renaissance as ancient greece is to atlantis?
Dunno but (Score:2)
Well it sucks (Score:2)
No way they'll really use that.
Maybe you should read it like GNU (Score:5, Funny)
Intel sucks (Score:4, Funny)
Perhaps... (Score:4, Interesting)
Example:
V=5
II=Intel Inside
V=5
I know. (Score:2)
VI is the mirror image of IV... (Score:2, Interesting)
I'm thinking too much bull... I should go home.
5 [parallel sign] 5 (Score:2, Insightful)
Don't get hung up on the Roman Numerals.
MMX (Score:4, Funny)
Re:MMX (Score:2)
Re:MMX (Score:2)
You see, I was pointing out that just because Intel trademarked a series of letters that happened to correspond to roman numerals does not mean that
Re:MMX (Score:2)
Back on topic: MMX is MultiMedia eXtensions. Is there a nice expansion for VIIV? As mentioned earlier, "II" could be Intel Inside, but the two Vs can't stand for much....
Re:MMX (Score:2)
Maybe they read this RFC (Score:2)
Roman numerals aren't positional... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Roman numerals aren't positional... (Score:2)
(The upper row, above the bar, on an abacus stands for fives, the lower rows for units (or 50 and tens, 500 and hundreds, etc.)
Re:Roman numerals aren't positional... (Score:4, Funny)
So, given the above, the new Intel trademark stands for a chip that's about as good as a broken abacus.
Re:Roman numerals aren't positional... (Score:3, Informative)
IV is a mediaeval invention (Score:3, Interesting)
Incidentally, Roman numerals were used in written contracts for quite a long time after we started using Arabic ones for calculation, because it was harder to alter the amounts fraudulently after they'd been w
It's the Pentium 64. But... (Score:2)
It's 801286, a Startrek 25th anniversary reference (Score:2)
Spock: "A vintage 801286 of the mid 21st century. A fine museum piece."
Animated Screenshot [cmoo.com]
If it is the Pentium 64... (Score:2)
I'll get to the bottom of this... (Score:2)
Oh, no worries, this is just the board of director's retreat [ile-yeu.com]. That crazy Intel board, working so hard. Deserves a break.
Paging Ronan Harris... Paging Ronan Harris (Score:2)
It could happen.
Who now? (Score:2)
Two Pentium 4s. Here's why... (Score:2)
VIIV (Score:3, Funny)
80286 = "286"
80386 = "386"
80486 = "486"
80586 = "Pentium" (faux latin for "Five")
80686 = "Pentium II" (fault latin + roman numberals for five-two)
Followed by... (in no particular order)
Celeron = cheap processor, faux latin for "fast" (based on, well, a whole lot of different actual Pentium chips dumbed down)
Xenon = Noble gas... Totally inert
Pentium III
Pentium 4
Itanium
So, duhh... of course the next one is Pentium VIIV
Re:VIIV (Score:2)
What? (Score:2, Funny)
I knew it all along... (Score:3, Funny)
It's been Roman Numerals all along (Score:3, Funny)
Pentium..........(original)
Pentium II.......(twice as good)
Pentium III......(3x as good)
Pentium IV......(4x as good)
Pentium M.......(1000x as good)
Pentium MMX.(2010x as good)
Apparently the Pentium III-M and IV-M were fairly good chips too.
Re:Learn you Roman numerals (Score:2)
Re:Learn you Roman numerals (Score:2)
or 5 2 5
or 5 1 4
... but it can't be any of those, including 6 4, because that's not how roman numerals are composed. VIIV is nonsense as a roman numeral.
Re:Learn you Roman numerals (Score:5, Informative)
And that is why they'd be able to trademark it. Can't trademark a number IIRC, which is why they opted for the Pentium name instead of 586. If it were actual Roman numerals, it would be a number and untrademarkable. Since it is nonsence, they can trademark it.
Sound like an explanatio to anybody else?
Re:Learn you Roman numerals (Score:2)
I think they could also trademark a sufficiently unusual style of writing "64".
Re:Roman Numerals (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Roman Numerals (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Roman Numerals (Score:2)
Re:Errrr... (Score:2)
Re:intel Trademarks (Score:4, Funny)
Re:intel Trademarks (Score:2)
Re:Pentium 8?? (Score:2, Redundant)
I - 1
II - 2
III - 3
IV - 4
V - 5
VI - 6
VII - 7
VIII - 8
IX - 9
X - 10
see here [novaroma.org]
Re:Obvious: it's pornographic! (Score:2)
You've a sick mind
Re:LXIV (Score:2)
Re:VIIV = 2x P4's... (Score:2)
Mirrored? As in the second one does the reverse of the first? Or mirrored as in RAID-0 where both do the same thing at the same time?
No, I think it's much more likely that it's a Pentium 6 with a Pentium 4 co-processor.