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August 27,
2001
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August 23, 2001
Semiconductor Business News |
Via Technologies Inc. here today accused Intel Corp. of trying
to stop it from selling chip sets for Pentium 4
processor-based PCs by using "scare tactics" and warning
customers that the Taiwan company is infringing upon protected
technologies in a recently introduced product. "Intel has
made repeated claims both in the media and in discussions with
customers that we are not licensed to sell products that are
compatible with the Intel Pentium 4," said Richard Brown,
director of marketing at Via Technologies. "We disagree with
these and other scare tactics that Intel is employing in the
PC industry for marketing purposes. |
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By Jack Robertson and Bruce Gain
August 24, 2001
EBN |
ATI Technologies Inc. will introduce an integrated core-logic
graphics processor for Intel Corp.'s Pentium 4 by the end of
the year, industry sources said, setting the stage for a new
dynamic in the embedded graphics sector. The launch will
turn up the heat on Intel, which controls more than half of
the market for integrated graphics ICs, and also on ATI
archrival Nvidia Corp., whose nForce integrated north
bridge/graphics processor supports Advanced Micro Devices
Inc.'s Athlon 4 microprocessor. |
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August 22, 2001
Semiconductor Business News |
Taiwan's Acer Laboratories Inc. (ALi) today announced plans to
integrate HyperTransport data bus technology in future
Southbridge chips to support the interconnect format launched
by Advanced Micro Devices Inc. earlier this year. ALi said
it believes the HyperTransport I/O technology will enable
next-generation Southbridge circuits to handle faster central
processor units while breaking system bottlenecks. |
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By Anthony Cataldo
August 23, 2001
EE Times |
Intel Corp. this week made its most comprehensive public
disclosure to date of a chip set designed to propel its CPUs
into highly scalable, multiprocessing systems. The
microprocessor giant said at the Hot Chips conference that its
forthcoming 870 chip set will allow OEMs to build 16
processors into a single system. While Intel has been making
headway in high-end computing with its Xeon and Itanium
processor lines, it has lacked a platform to turn such CPUs
into multiprocessing systems. Intel's answer is the 870, which
is expected to roll out early next year for a new version of
the Xeon 32-bit processor and for the next-generation IA-64
processor, or McKinley. |
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By Jack Robertson
August 20, 2001
EBN |
The mainstream PC market is about to give Intel Corp.'s
Pentium 4 a boost, with expectations that unit shipments of
the microprocessor will increase by five times in the next
four months. Come September, Intel, Santa Clara, Calif.,
will have finally assembled the pieces of its Pentium 4
strategy, allowing the company to begin phasing out the
venerable Pentium III microprocessor in all PC segments. |
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By Michael Kanellos
August 27, 2001
C/Net |
Downtown San Jose, Calif., will be awash in blue golf shirts
this week, as engineers and executives arrive for the Intel
Developer Forum. The four-day conference, which runs through
Aug. 30, will serve as a showcase for Intel and its allies to
demonstrate upcoming products and discuss future standards and
technological directions.
On Monday, a number of PC manufacturers will unveil new
computers in conjunction with the release of the 1.9GHz and
2GHz Pentium 4 chips. Many of these new machines will sell for
less than $2,000. |
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Truths...from the rumor mill |
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By Mike Magee
August 24, 2001
The Inquirer |
WE DON'T KNOW how many more times we're gonna have to write
this story between now and Monday but here's some more info
about La Intella's cunning plans to make you buy new lamps for
old. The Pentium 4 1.5GHz really costs $129 because despite
what anyone else has written elsewhere, this boxed processor
is still bundled with Rambus RIMMs.
Here are the prices of Intel's boxed motherboards. The
Garibaldi with no audio costs $162, the same board with audio
and LAN capabilities costs $185. |
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By Andrew Thomas
August 24, 2001
The Inquirer |
IN A BLOOD-curdling statement, chip behemoth Intel has slammed
chipset behemoth Via (all caps) in no uncertain terms. An
Intel Europe spokesman removed his jacket, rolled up his
sleeves, spat on his hands and shouted:
"Via does not have a license to produce chipsets compatible
with Intel's Pentium 4 microprocessors. To date we have
licensed ATI, SiS and ALI to build chipsets for the Pentium 4
microprocessor." |
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By Fudo Abazovic
August 24, 2001
The Inquirer |
SiS REPRESENTATIVES have told the INQUIRER about some
integrated graphics it has up its sleeve. In the last few
days we've heard a number of things about Nforce and Via's
plans. Nforce will offer second generation T&L graphic inside,
while Via is ready to move from good old Savage 4 to an
improved SuperSavage core with integrated graphics. |
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By Tony Smith
August 23, 2001
The Register |
Intel has officially denied that it plans to bring forward the
release of the DDR version of its i845 chipset, but Taiwanese
memory and mobo companies insist that that is exactly what the
chip giant will do. We noted a week or so back that comments
from Hynix suggested that Intel may well have brought the
release of the DDR i845 forward from its scheduled Q1 2002
launch timeframe, with a new launch coming perhaps as soon as
the formal launch of the PC133 i845. |
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By Tony Smith
August 24, 2001
The Register |
Intel took the wraps off its i870 chipset this week, the part
that will allow server makers to build 16-way systems based on
its Xeon and Itanium processors. It will also be the first
chipset to support Intel's Infiniband architecture. And if it
ships in Q4, as suggested by the company's server roadmap, it
will be the first Intel chipset to support DDR SDRAM.
The chipset has been on Intel's server roadmap for some
time now, but has always been discussed in terms of four- and
eight-way systems. Ultimately, the company told attendees at
this week's Hot Chips conference, it will develop new
interfaces that will scale up to 256-CPU systems. |
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By Tony Smith
August 15, 2001
The Register |
Intel's mysterious mobile processor, Banias, continues to
generate scraps of information but little in the way of a full
meal or even a light snack. The latest addition to the pot
comes from Japanese Web site PC Watch, which notes an industry
source's claim that the part will ship Q2 2003 after sampling
in Q3 2002. It also says it has heard that Intel is preparing
two chipsets for the part, codenamed Odum and Monterra, the
former a mainstream product, the other a budget-oriented
version with integrated graphics. |