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Intel, AMD battle for chip speed crown
By Michael Kanellos
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
July 28, 2000, 6:05 a.m. PT

Intel will hurdle past another speed barrier Monday when it releases a 1.13-GHz
Pentium III, but rival Advanced Micro Devices won`t be far behind with a 1.1-GHz
Athlon on Aug. 28.

AMD is also busy preparing Athlon chips for the notebook market. In the fourth quarter, the
company will come out with Corvette, a low-power version of Athlon for deluxe notebooks and
desktops, and Camaro, a similar chip for budget portables.

Intel`s new chip, which will sell for around $990 in volume
quantities, is expected to be featured in computers from Dell
Computer and IBM, among other manufacturers. With the new
chip, Intel will likely drop the price of its 1-GHz Pentium III to
around $750. However, the company won`t likely cut other Pentium
III prices, as it shaved the wholesale prices on the rest of the line
by 10 to 24 percent July 17.

The Santa Clara, Calif., chip giant has been saddled with a
processor shortage since last October when it released a new
version of the Pentium III. High demand, coupled with
manufacturing difficulties, has made Pentium IIIs, especially the
fastest versions, tough to find.

One computer dealer, for instance, noted that it was nearly
impossible to get any Pentium IIIs running at above 750 MHz. Now,
933-MHz Pentium IIIs can be found, but back orders still exist, and
the 1-GHz Pentium III remains invisible.

An Intel spokesman earlier stated that the 1.13-GHz chip will
initially show up only in limited quantities when it arrives July 31. However, he added that
1-GHz Pentium III supplies will increase in the third quarter.

By contrast, AMD has fared better in terms of supplying the market this year. The company
was partially affected by shortages of motherboards and chipsets for Athlon in the second
quarter, but the situation has faded, according to Ben Anixter, vice president for external affairs
at AMD.

"Infrastructure will not be a limiting factor going
forward," he told an audience at the Robertson
Stephens semiconductor conference in San
Francisco.

Not to be outpaced in the speed race, AMD
president Hector Ruiz announced in Europe
yesterday that the company will release a
1.1-GHz Athlon on Aug. 28, an AMD spokesman
confirmed.

The company will then aim at the notebook and
server market in the fourth quarter. Corvette and
Camaro, which are code names, will essentially
be low-power versions of the current Athlon and
Duron chips, said Anixter. Duron is a budget
version of Athlon.

Although the two upcoming chips will be based on
the general Athlon architecture, they will
incorporate changes in the processor core that
allow the chips to run on less power. The processors will also contain AMD`s PowerNow
technology, which reduces power consumption when the notebook is unplugged or not
performing energy-taxing tasks.

"This will allow us to have our first (Athlon) notebook products," Anixter
said. "They will come with an improved core, and PowerNow technology
will be incorporated."

Turning down power consumption is necessary, according to Nathan
Brookwood, an analyst at Insight 64. "The current Athlons are pretty
power hungry," he said. "They consume almost twice the power of the
equivalent Pentium IIIs."

Gradually, Corvette and Camaro will in all likelihood replace the current Athlon and Duron
desktop chips, said a company representative. Such a move would simplify manufacturing by
reducing the number of processors that need to be made.

For servers, the company will release Mustang, which is a version of the Corvette chip with up
to 1MB of secondary cache, a stash of memory near the processor that enhances
performance. Mustang will have effectively four times the cache of current Athlons.
 
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Autor (Datum des Eintrages): Halbleiterkönig  (30.07.00 13:20:16)
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