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With the release of the KX133 in early 2000, the AMD Athlon finally had a cheap, stable platform from which it could attack Intel's marketshare. Many excellent boards, such as Abit's KA7 and ASUS's K7V drew in the enthusiast market that AMD is so popular with now. With the release of the Socket A form factor from AMD, it was found that KX133 was incompatible with higher clock speed Socket A processors. Thus, KZ133 (later KT133) was born.
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