United Business Media EE Times


Search

HOMELATEST NEWSSEMICONDUCTORSMOST POPULARMARKET INTELLIGENCE UNITFORUMSDESIGNNEW PRODUCTSCAREERSBLOGSCONTACTEVENTSSIGN UP!RSS

 

Intel believes new 2.2-GHz Pentium 4 will help revive PC sales








EBN


SANTA CLARA, Calif. -- Intel Corp. contends its new Pentium 4 processor and double-data rate (DDR) chip set will help revive the sluggish PC market as consumers embrace their multimedia capabilities. As expected, Intel today formally introduced its 2.2-GHz Pentium 4, which is fabricated with 0.13-micron technology, and DDR chip set (see today's story).

According to Intel, some 450 million PCs in use today run at 700 MHz or less -- not enough to handle MP3 files, streaming video on the Internet, recordable DVDs, and online gaming.

"The upgrade cycle has already started," said Louis Burns, vice president and general manager of Intel's Desktop Platforms Group. "As the market grows again, it will be P4 based. I'm not saying the market will double in 2002, but it will quickly transition to P4."

Though only slightly faster than existing 2-GHz chips, the difference in the new 0.13-micron P4 processor is "far more than just another couple megahertz," Burns argued.

By moving the P4 architecture from 0.18-micron to a finer process geometry, Intel is able to achieve improvements in both speed and power draw, as well as to double the cache size to 512 Kbytes, Burns said.

Perhaps more significantly, he said, the new process effectively doubles the number of die produced per silicon wafer, reducing manufacturing cost, thus allowing Intel to target multiple market tiers with one high-performance device.

The simultaneous release today of Intel's awaited 845D chip set with support for DDR synchronous DRAM rounds out the multi-segment approach, providing three different memory interfaces. Intel also markets chip sets for SDRAM and Direct Rambus DRAM.

"Whatever price point people want to buy at, I'm giving them," Burns said at a press conference on Friday in Burlingame, Calif., prior to today's introduction.

Regarding the claim by Advanced Micro Devices Inc. that its new Athlon runs faster than Intel's offering (see today's story), Burns said that "[The P4] is unequivocally the fastest thing on the planet, benchmarks will show that. It's about the future with a new architecture, not the extension of an old one."











  Free Subscription to EE Times
First Name Last Name
Company Name Title
Email address
  Click here for your Free Subscription to EETimes Europe
 
CAREER CENTER
Ready to take that job and shove it?
SEARCH JOBS
SPONSOR

RECENT JOB POSTINGS
CAREER NEWS
Federal CTO Sees IT Leading U.S. Out Of Recession
Aneesh Chopra is looking to other CIOs to advise him on fleshing out a more detailed agenda to best serve the president's IT agenda.

For more great jobs, career related news, features and services, please visit EETimes' Career Center.



All White Papers »   

  Around Silicon Strategies

FPGA startup crunch: These articles are part of a series that examines the status of various FPGA startups in light of the economic recession. Startups Abound Logic, Achronix Semiconductor and Cswitch are all on the hot seat. More...

10 fab technologies on the hot seat: There's trouble brewing in chip-making paradise. Delivery of chips at 32-nm and beyond won't be a cool breeze. EE Times has constructed the following list of 10 fab technologies that could make or break future IC scaling. More...

6 fab technologies on the bubble: It isn't going to be a slam-dunk to deliver chips at 32-nm and beyond. See our story about 10 fab technologies on the hot seat. Then read this article: 6 technologies on the bubble. More...

Our take on Intel-River: With its acquisition of embedded software leader Wind River Systems Inc., Intel Corp. has unambiguously signaled that it is again attempting to diversify beyond X86 processors. Here's our take on the deal. More...

CEVA's reversal: When Gideon Wertheizer, CEVA's CEO, came to New York to ring the closing bell at Nasdaq to celebrate the company's 10th year anniversary, he talked about CEVA's 21.6 percent revenue growth in 2008. More...

Hot technologies to watch for in 2009: Every technologist, marketer, industry analyst and reporter on a hunt for the next big thing is bracing for the 2009 Consumer Electronics Show scheduled less than a month away. More...

Top 20 predictions for semis in 2009: To help sort out the confusion in the market, EE Times has released its own chip forecasts--and other predictions--for 2009. So, what will happen in analog, FPGAs, foundry, memory, MPUs and other sectors? More...

Silicon 60 version 8.0 The EE Times 60 Emerging Startups list, first published in April 2004, has been updated to version 8.0 to reflect the latest corporate, commercial, technology and market conditions. More...

 
Education and
Learning


Learn Now:












Home | About | Editorial Calendar | Feedback | Subscriptions | Newsletter | Media Kit | Contact | Reprints|  RSS|   Digital|  Mobile
Network Websites
International
Network Features




All materials on this site Copyright © 2009 TechInsights, a Division of United Business Media LLC All rights reserved.
Privacy Statement | Terms of Service | About