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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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Moorestown

Moorestown may refer to: Technology: Moorestown computing platform by Intel United States geography: Moorestown, Michigan Moorestown, New Jersey Moorestown-Lenola

Mobile Internet device

MID/smartphone platform (codenamed Moorestown) contains a 45 nm Intel Atom processor (codenamed Lincroft ) and a separate 65 nm Platform Controller Hub (codenamed

MeeGo

2010. The preview was initially available for the Aava Mobile Intel Moorestown platform, and a 'kickstart' file provided for developers to build an image

Bonnell (microarchitecture)

an Intel Atom platform based on Moorestown. Both platforms include a Lincroft microprocessor, but use two distinct input/output Platform Controller Hubs

Xeon

original on August 10, 2010. Retrieved December 10, 2022. "Intel demos Moorestown, embeds Nehalem". The Register. Shimpi, Anand Lal (May 27, 2009). "Nehalem-EX:

List of Intel codenames

Retrieved June 1, 2011. Tony Smith (October 1, 2009). "Inside Intel's 'Moorestown'". The Register. Archived from the original on October 4, 2009. Retrieved

Land Warrior

program, under a different name, was undertaken by General Electric in Moorestown, New Jersey in approximately 1989, as a prototype having intent to eventually

AN/FPS-16 Instrumentation Radar

Grand Bahama Island, BWI, and one remained at RCA (now Lockheed Martin), Moorestown, N.J. These radars are almost identical to later production models. This