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Moorestown (computing platform)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Moorestown is the Intel Corporation's handheld MID and smartphone platform based on Lincroft system-on-a-chip with an Atom processor core, Langwell input/output Platform Controller Hub (I/O PCH), and a Briertown Power Management IC.[1][2] Announced in 2010, the platform was demonstrated running Moblin Linux.[3]

The Moorestown platform introduced the Simple Firmware Interface (SFI), a lightweight alternative to ACPI. In Linux 5.12, support for SFI, which was previously marked as obsolete, was removed from the kernel by Intel.[4][5]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "New Intel® Atom™ Processor-Based Platform Using Significantly Lower Power Readies Intel for Smartphone, Tablet Push".
  2. ^ Intel’s Next-Generation Handheld Platform (codenamed “Moorestown”)
  3. ^ Intel Demonstrates Moorestown Smartphones and Tablet Running Moblin, Including LG, [Quanta] and [Compal]
  4. ^ The Linux Kernel Obsoletes The Intel Simple Firmware Interface
  5. ^ Intel's Simple Firmware Interface Being Killed Off With Linux 5.12
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