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Intel Developer Forum Conference
February 23-25, 1999
Palm Springs Convention Center
Palm Springs, Calif.

IDF: Intel promises Merced samples by midyear

(02/26/99, 12:15 p.m. EDT)
Intel Corp. said its Merced processor development effort has reached a significant milestone: the running of the Unix operating system in a software simulation of a four-way Merced implementation.

IDF: Talks may end PC bus wars

(02/25/99, 4:28 p.m. EDT)
Peace is breaking out in the PC bus wars. Members of the Intel-led NGIO Forum and of the competing Future I/O group met privately at the Intel Developer Forum this week and made progress toward merging what have been two separate and contentious efforts to define a channel-based I/O architecture for tomorrow's PC servers.

Monitors demo digital interface spec

(02/25/99, 4:01 p.m. EDT)
The PC world declared war on analog this week at the Intel Developers Forum, as the Digital Display Working Group (DDWG) presented a soup-to-nuts digital-interface specification for monitors, along with early flat-panel implementations and even a compliant digital-input CRT.

Mobile Rambus spec unveiled

(02/25/99, 3:58 p.m. EDT)
Rambus Inc. announced a mobile version of its technology at the Intel Developers Forum this week, and Intel executives said they expect the Rambus DRAMs to show up in notebook computers in mid-2000.

Much work lays ahead for Rambus systems, Intel says

(02/14/99, 2:20 p.m. EDT)
Intel Corp. has pushed back the official launch date for Rambus-based desktop systems to September, or about three months later than originally planned. But company executives at the Intel Developer Forum steadfastly denied that Intel would cave in and support an interim PC133 memory architecture.

Intel's USB 2.0 may squeeze 1394 into a PC niche

(02/14/99, 11:52 a.m. EDT)
Intel Corp. sent the world of PC peripheral interfaces spinning Tuesday (Feb. 23) when it announced it was working on a version the Universal Serial Bus that could run faster than 200 Mbits/second and on a future rev of the ATA-66 interface that could act as a Gbit/second serial link. The work could effectively squeeze 1394, once groomed as a primary interface for future desktops, into a niche role in tomorrow's PCs.

Merced details, encryption top Intel Developersı Forum agenda

(02/16/99, 5:07 p.m. EDT)
Intel Corp. will detail its plans for security and data encryption, next-generation interconnect and the Rambus memory architecture at the Intel Developers' Forum, which convenes here Feb. 23-25.

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