Acpi Genuineintel---intel64-family-6-model-58 Access
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: Refers to the microarchitecture family. Nearly all modern Intel processors since the Pentium Pro fall under "Family 6".
Each part of this string identifies a specific layer of your CPU architecture:
For OS/ACPI developers working with this CPU: acpi genuineintel---intel64-family-6-model-58
used by the Windows operating system to identify processors based on the Intel Ivy Bridge
While "Family 6 Model 58" sounds complex, it’s just technical shorthand for a 3rd Gen Intel "Ivy Bridge"
Duration: 2 hours Total marks: 100
: Since the release of the Pentium Pro, almost all modern Intel Core, Xeon, and Celeron processors have fallen under "Family 6". It signifies the broad architectural lineage used by Intel for its core performance lines.
This sub-system often causes "Driver Entry" errors in the Event Viewer. Ensure the Intel ME driver is installed.
If a process related to this ID is taxing your system, it’s rarely the CPU itself. Instead, check for "System interrupts," which suggests a different piece of hardware is struggling to communicate with the Ivy Bridge processor via the ACPI. Performance in 2024 and Beyond This public link is valid for 7 days
The cryptic string is a standardized hardware identification string used by Windows operating systems to communicate directly with a computer's central processing unit (CPU). If you encounter this string in the Windows Device Manager under an "Unknown Device" warning, or see it listed in system crash dumps (BSOD logs), your operating system is communicating with a 3rd Generation Intel Core processor—better known by its architectural codename, Ivy Bridge .
: A malfunction in this co-processor subsystem breaks deep platform configuration structures. Step-by-Step Resolution Process
If you have an Ivy Bridge system and notice cores stuck at 800 MHz, the issue is not this string, but rather ACPI thermal or power limit. Check: Can’t copy the link right now