Trinket Slot 1 Number



Slot 1
TypeSlot
Chip form factors
  • Single Edge Contact Cartridge (Pentium II)
  • Single Edge Contact Cartridge 2 (Pentium II, Pentium III)
  • Single Edge Processor Package (Celeron)
Contacts242[1]
FSB protocolAGTL+
FSB frequency66, 100, and (on third-party chipsets) 133 MHz
Voltage range1.3 to 3.50 V
ProcessorsPentium II: 233–450 MHz

Celeron: 266–433 MHz
Pentium III: 450–1.133 GHz
(A Slotket makes following Socket 370 CPUs usable:
Celeron and Pentium III to 1,400 MHz,
VIA Cyrix III: 350–733 MHz,
VIA C3: 733–1,200 MHz

Slotkets also made it possible to use some Pentium Pro CPUs for Socket 8 using the same method.)
PredecessorSocket 7
SuccessorSocket 370
This article is part of the CPU socket series

Your trinkets are in slot 13 and 14, so to use one the command is: /use 13 Since trinkets are on the global cooldown, you can combine them with any spell you want afterwards. You can even combine them with multiple spells that also aren’t on the GCD. Whether or Not You Do a Good Christopher Walken (Number 20 of The Things Nick is the Keeper Of) These Stupid Porg Penguin Things are Stupid, and Nonsensical, and They are Going to Ruin The Last Jedi (Number 22 of The Things Nick is the Keeper Of) Whether or Not Blade Runner 2049 is a Good Movie (Number 1 of The Things Nick is the Keeper Of).

Pentium II SECC form installed into Slot 1
Trinket Slot 1 Number

But you are right that trinkets are slot 13 (top trinket) and 14 (bottom) and the macro would be /use 14. If you are not going to macro the trinket with another ability such as Icy Veins (for example) just drag the trinket to your action bar and don't worry about taking up a macro slot. Mouseover on either trinket will display a menu of up to 30 trinkets in your bags to swap. Swapping/Using trinkets. Left click a trinket in the menu to equip it to the top trinket slot. Right click a trinket in the menu to equip it to the bottom trinket slot. Left or Right click either trinket to use them. Or make a key binding for either trinket. The number of logical ranks seen by the controller per slot is always 2 for UniPHY-based memory interfaces which is the same as Number of ranks per slot. The UniPHY-based memory controller supports the rank multiplication factor needed for LRDIMMs by increasing the row address bits.

Slot 1 refers to the physical and electrical specification for the connector used by some of Intel's microprocessors, including the Pentium Pro, Celeron, Pentium II and the Pentium III. Both single and dual processor configurations were implemented.

Intel switched back to the traditional socket interface with Socket 370 in 1999.

General[edit]

With the introduction of the Pentium II CPU, the need for greater access for testing had made the transition from socket to slot necessary. Previously with the Pentium Pro, Intel had combined processor and cache dies in the same Socket 8 package. These were connected by a full-speed bus, resulting in significant performance benefits. Unfortunately, this method required that the two components be bonded together early in the production process, before testing was possible. As a result, a single, tiny flaw in either die made it necessary to discard the entire assembly, causing low production yield and high cost.[citation needed]

Intel subsequently designed a circuit board where the CPU and cache remained closely integrated, but were mounted on a printed circuit board, called a Single-Edged Contact Cartridge (SECC). The CPU and cache could be tested separately, before final assembly into a package, reducing cost and making the CPU more attractive to markets other than that of high-end servers. These cards could also be easily plugged into a Slot 1, thereby eliminating the chance for pins of a typical CPU to be bent or broken when installing in a socket.

The form factor used for Slot 1 was a 5-inch-long, 242-contact edge connector named SC242. To prevent the cartridge from being inserted the wrong way, the slot was keyed to allow installation in only one direction. The SC242 was later used for AMD's Slot A as well, and while the two slots were identical mechanically, they were electrically incompatible. To discourage Slot A users from trying to install a Slot 1 CPU, the connector was rotated 180 degrees on Slot A motherboards.

With the new Slot 1, Intel added support for symmetric multiprocessing (SMP). A maximum of two Pentium II or Pentium III CPUs can be used in a dual slot motherboard. The Celeron does not have official SMP support.

There are also converter cards, known as Slotkets, which hold a Socket 8 so that a Pentium Pro CPU can be used with Slot 1 motherboards.[2] These specific converters, however, are rare. Another kind of slotket allows using a Socket 370 CPU in a Slot 1. Many of these latter devices are equipped with own voltage regulator modules, in order to supply the new CPU with a lower core voltage, which the motherboard would not otherwise allow.

Form factors[edit]

Intel Pentium II CPU in SECC form factor
Pentium III (Katmai) in SECC2: CPU at center, two chips at right are cache
Celeron in SEPP: CPU at center (under heat spreader), surrounding chips are resistors and bypass capacitors

The Single Edge Contact Cartridge, or 'SECC', was used at the beginning of the Slot 1-era for Pentium II CPUs. Inside the cartridge, the CPU itself is enclosed in a hybrid plastic and metal case. The back of the housing is plastic and has several markings on it: the name, 'Pentium II'; the Intel logo; a hologram; and the model number. The front consists of a black anodized aluminum plate, which is used to hold the CPU cooler. The SECC form is very solid, because the CPU itself is resting safely inside the case. As compared to socket-based CPUs, there are no pins that can be bent, and the CPU is less likely to be damaged by improper installation of a cooler.

Following SECC, the SEPP-form (Single Edge Processor Package) appeared on the market. It was designed for lower-priced Celeron CPUs. This form lacks a case entirely, consisting solely of the printed-circuit board holding the components.

A form factor called SECC2 was used for late Pentium II and Pentium III CPUs for Slot 1, which was created to accommodate the switch to flip chip packaging.[3] Only the front plate was carried over, the coolers were now mounted straight to the PCB and exposed CPU die and are, as such, incompatible with SECC cartridges.

History[edit]

Historically, there are three platforms for the Intel P6-CPUs: Socket 8, Slot 1 and Socket 370.

Slot 1 is a successor to Socket 8. While the Socket 8 CPUs (Pentium Pro) directly had the L2-cache embedded into the CPU, it is located (outside of the core) on a circuit board shared with the core itself. The exception is later Slot 1 CPUs with the Coppermine core which have the L2-Cache embedded into the die.

In the beginning of 2000, while the Pentium-III-CPUs with FC-PGA-housing appeared, Slot 1 was slowly succeeded by Socket 370, after Intel had already offered Socket 370 and Slot 1 at the same time since the beginning of 1999. Socket 370 was initially made for the low-cost Celeron processors, while Slot 1 was thought of as a platform for the expensive Pentium II and early Pentium III models. Cache and core were both embedded into the die.

Slot 1 also obsoleted the old Socket 7, at least regarding Intel, as the standard platform for the home-user. After superseding the Intel P5Pentium MMX CPU, Intel completely left the Socket 7 market.

Chipsets and officially supported CPUs[4][5][edit]

Slot 1/Socket 370 Converter
Slot 1/Socket 8 Converter

Intel 440FX [6][edit]

  • Introduced in: May 6, 1996
  • FSB: 66 MHz
  • PIO/WDMA
  • Supported RAM type: EDO-DRAM
  • Supported CPUs:
    • Pentium II with 66 MHz FSB
    • Celeron (Covington, Mendocino)
  • Used in both Socket 8 (Pentium Pro) and Slot 1 (Pentium II, early Celerons)
  • Does not support AGP or SDRAM
  • Allowed up to two CPUs for SMP

Intel 440LX [7][edit]

  • Introduced in: August 27, 1997
  • FSB: 66 MHz
  • Supported RAM type: EDO-DRAM, SDRAM
  • Supported CPUs: Pentium II, Celeron
  • AGP 2× Mode
  • UDMA/33
    • Pentium II with 66 MHz FSB
    • Celeron (Covington, Mendocino)
  • Introduced support for AGP and SDRAM
  • Allowed up to two CPUs for SMP

Intel 440EX [8][edit]

  • Introduced in: April, 1998
  • FSB: 66 MHz
  • Supported RAM type: EDO-DRAM, SDRAM
  • Supported CPUs: Pentium II, Celeron
  • AGP 2× Mode
  • UDMA/33
    • Pentium II with 66 MHz FSB
    • Celeron (Covington, Mendocino)
  • Same specifications as 440LX, but memory support limited to 256MB and no SMP support.

Intel 440BX [9][edit]

  • Introduced in: April 1998
  • FSB: 66 and 100 MHz (some motherboards supported overclocking to 133 MHz, allowing usage of Socket 370 CPUs using a Slocket)
  • AGP 2× Mode (max memory mapping 32 or 64 MB)
  • UDMA/33
  • Supported RAM types: SDRAM (PC66 and PC100, PC133 with overclocking) up to 4 DIMMs of 256 MB
  • Supported CPUs:
    • Pentium II with 66 and 100 MHz FSB
    • Pentium III with 100 MHz FSB (133 with overclocking)
    • Celeron (Covington, Mendocino, Coppermine)
  • Allowed up to two CPUs for SMP

Intel 440ZX[edit]

  • Introduced in: November 1998
  • FSB: 66 and 100 MHz (some motherboards supported overclocking to 133 MHz, allowing usage of Socket 370 CPUs using a Slocket)
  • AGP 2× Mode
  • UDMA/33
  • Supported RAM types: SDRAM (PC66 and PC100, PC133 with overclocking)
  • Supported CPUs:
    • Pentium II with 66 and 100 MHz FSB
    • Pentium III with 100 MHz FSB (133 with overclocking)
    • Celeron (Covington, Mendocino, Coppermine)

Intel 820/820E (Camino)[edit]

  • Introduced in: November 1999
  • FSB: 66, 100, and 133 MHz
  • AGP 4× Mode
  • UDMA/66 (i820), UDMA/100 (i820E)
  • Supported RAM types: RDRAM, SDRAM (PC133)
  • Supported CPUs: All Slot 1 CPUs
  • Allowed up to two CPUs for SMP

Via Apollo Pro / Pro+[edit]

  • Introduced in: May 1998 (Pro Plus: Dec 1998)
  • FSB: 66, 100 MHz (some motherboards supported overclocking to 133 MHz, allowing usage of Socket 370 CPUs using a Slocket)
  • AGP 2× Mode
  • UDMA/33 (VT82C586B/VT82C596A), UDMA/66 (VT82C596B)
  • Supported CPUs:
    • Pentium Pro with 66 MHz FSB
    • Pentium II with 66 and 100 MHz FSB
    • Pentium III with 100 MHz FSB (133 with overclocking)
    • Celeron (Covington, Mendocino, Coppermine)

Via Apollo Pro 133[edit]

  • Introduced in: July 1999
  • FSB: 66, 100, and 133 MHz
  • AGP 2× Mode
  • UDMA/33 (VT82C596A), UDMA/66 (VT82C596B/VT82C686A), UDMA/100 (VT82C686B)
  • Supported CPUs: All Slot 1 CPUs

Via Apollo Pro 133A[edit]

  • Introduced in: Oct 1999
  • FSB: 66, 100, and 133 MHz
  • AGP 4× Mode
  • UDMA/66 (VT82C596B/VT82C686A), UDMA/100 (VT82C686B)
  • Supported CPUs: All Slot 1 CPUs
  • Allowed up to two CPUs for SMP

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^'CPU Sockets Chart'. erols.com. Retrieved 2009-03-31.
  2. ^'PPro on a BX?-Usenet Gateway'.
  3. ^http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/overclocking-special,94-2.html[dead link]
  4. ^List of Intel chipsets
  5. ^List of VIA chipsets
  6. ^Intel Corporation: 440FX PCIset Datasheet
  7. ^Intel Corporation: 440LX AGPset Design Guide[permanent dead link]
  8. ^Intel Corporation: 440EX AGPset Design Guide
  9. ^Intel Corporation: 440BX AGPset Design GuideArchived 2012-10-04 at the Wayback Machine

External links[edit]

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Slot 1.
  • Intel's specifications for the SC242 connectors[permanent dead link]
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Slot_1&oldid=989142558'

Shadowstrike Macro:

Uses [Backstab] or [Shadowstrike] depending on your stance.

Shadowdance Macro:

Trinket Slot Number Wow

[stance:0] prevents you from accidentallyactivating [Shadow Dance] twice.
/cast Shadowstrike prevents you from accidentally using [Backstab] after activating [Shadow Dance].

You can add this 2 conditions if you want to, [Specter of Betrayal] or any other on use trinket is usually lined up with [Shadow Dance]. [Symbols of Death] gets usually used pre [Shadow Dance]. This means this condition will never trigger but would allow you to use [Symbols of Death] together with [Shadow Dance] during the animation.
it's still recommended to use 2 macros in case you don't want [Symbols of Death] to line up or if you don't want to use [Shadowstrike].

Marked for Death / Death from Above Macro:

Uses [Marked for Death] or [Death from Above] depending on what Talent is used.

Same but with mouseover for [Marked for Death].

Vanish Macros:

My personal version of the macro, prevents you from accidentally using [Vanish] when out of combat.

Trinket

Nightblade Mouseover Macro:

Use [Nightblade] on mouseover, uses nightblade on the target if no mouseover exist.

remove @target if you don't want the macro to only work on mouseover.

Shadowstep Mouseover Macro:

It's often quite nice to have the option to [Shadowstep] a target via mouseover during a fight.

Item slot Use Macro:

Trinket Slot Number

Uses the Item slot, can be used for Trinkets, Rings or Engineering Enchants.

Item slots:
1 - Head Slot
6 - Belt Slot
11 - Ring Slot 1
12 - Ring Slot 2
13 - Trinket Slot 1
14 - Trinket Slot 2
15 - Back Slot

Trinket Slot 1 Numbers

Tricks of the Trade Macro:

[Tricks of the Trade] on the Main tank.