<Ul> <Li> A-Series, dual -, triple -, and quad - core of Accelerated Processor Units (APU). </Li> <Li> Athlon 64, Athlon 64 FX and Athlon 64 X2 family, dual - core desktop processors . </Li> <Li> Athlon II, dual -, triple -, and quad - core desktop processors . </Li> <Li> FX - Series, quad -, 6 -, and 8 - core desktop processors . </Li> <Li> Opteron, dual -, quad -, 6 -, 8 -, 12 -, and 16 - core server / workstation processors . </Li> <Li> Phenom, dual -, triple -, and quad - core processors . </Li> <Li> Phenom II, dual -, triple -, quad -, and 6 - core desktop processors . </Li> <Li> Sempron X2, dual - core entry level processors . </Li> <Li> Turion 64 X2, dual - core laptop processors . </Li> <Li> Ryzen, quad -, 6 -, 8 -, 12 -, and 16 - core desktop processors </Li> <Li> Epyc, 8 -, 16 -, 24 -, and 32 - core server processors </Li> <Li> Radeon and FireStream multi-core GPU / GPGPU (10 cores, 16 5 - issue wide superscalar stream processors per core) </Li> </Ul> <Li> A-Series, dual -, triple -, and quad - core of Accelerated Processor Units (APU). </Li> <Li> Athlon 64, Athlon 64 FX and Athlon 64 X2 family, dual - core desktop processors . </Li> <Li> Athlon II, dual -, triple -, and quad - core desktop processors . </Li>

When was the first dual core processor released