Socket 370
<hardware, standard, processor> (PGA370) A physical and electrical specification for a
motherboard processor socket.
Socket 370 uses a square
SPGA ZIF socket with 370 pins, arranged 37x37 (sometimes described as 19x19).
Intel originally designed Socket 370 for
PPGA Celeron processors.
Newer Socket 370 motherboards additionally support
FC-PGA Celeron and
Pentium III processors.
The difference between the two versions is electrical; some pins are used differently and voltage requirements have been changed from Intel's VRM 8.2 to VRM 8.4.
In addition, Celeron processors require a 66 MHz front side bus (
FSB), and Pentium III processors require a 100/133 MHz FSB.
Some older Socket 370 motherboards support VRM 8.4 and variable bus speeds, so adapters are available that convert the socket pinout to allow FC-PGA processors to work.
VIA's Cyrix III processor was designed to work with Socket 370 motherboards.
Intel Celeron Processor in PPGA form factor - Integration (http://www.pentium.com/design/quality/celeron/ppga/integration.htm).
Pentium III Processors - Design Guidelines (http://www.intel.com/design/PentiumIII/designgd/).