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December 12,
2001
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By Michael Kanellos
December 11, 2001
C/Net |
It's going to be a long haul for Itanium, Intel's new server
chip. Intel spent nearly 10 years and hundreds of millions
of dollars to develop Itanium, but the first version of the
chip has faced slow sales so far.
In the third quarter--the first full quarter of Itanium
sales--manufacturers sold just $13.7 million worth of servers
containing the chip, which comes to less than 500 servers,
according to market researcher IDC. |
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By Faith Hung
December 11, 2001
EBN |
Via Technologies Inc. claimed that it has launched the
industry's lowest power X86-compatible embedded platform,
aiming at the information appliance (IA) and home
entertainment markets. Dubbed “Eden,” the platform offers
high performance and consumes about 6 watts of power, the
least among rival products, according to the core-logic
chipset designer. Eden will compete with the Geode line of
National Semiconductor Corp., Santa Clara, Calif., and the
SiS550 family of Silicon Integrated Systems, Hsinchu, Taiwan,
among others, some analysts said. |
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By John G. Spooner
December 11, 2001
C/Net |
Intel is planning the stealth introduction of a chipset that
will let computer makers connect the Pentium 4 to speedy DDR
(double data rate) memory. Intel will allow PC makers to
quietly begin taking orders for computers fitted with a new
version of its 845 chipset Dec. 17, CNET News.com has learned.
The official announcement of the chipset and the corresponding
fanfare won't come until early January. |
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By Jack Robertson
December 11, 2001
EBN |
Advanced Micro Devices' wafer fab here is proof that the
company no longer depends on Intel Corp. for technological
advances, AMD officials contend. In fact, AMD claims that
its pioneering ramp-up of copper processing and
silicon-on-insulator (SOI) wafers at its Fab 30 here will
benefit archrival Intel, which can now get mature and lower
cost equipment as it moves into the new technologies. |
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By Rick Merritt
December 10, 2001
EE Times |
Intel Corp. and Sun Microsystems Inc. are each laying plans to
deliver multiprocessing computers on a chip. Both plan to put
two to more processors on a die with simultaneous
multithreading (SMT), a design approach that lets a processor
handle two or more threads of an application simultaneously.
Intel is working on a unique implementation of SMT to address
the memory access issues that crop up in multiprocessors. Sun
will go further, designing one or more new Sparc processor
cores that will be optimized for multiprocessing chips with
four or more cores on a die. |
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Truths...from the rumor mill |
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By Eva Glass
December 11, 2001
The Inquirer |
I HUNG OUT WITH MY GIRLFRIEND from Transmeta yesterday and she
told me that TSMC is getting a real old flea in its ear about
all kinds of things. Sharing a ciggie a good 500 yards from
HQ, she told me that TSMC is telling its customers that TMTA
has passed its .13µ qualification and is already shipping
parts.
Phew, she said. You shoulda seen the faces of the boys when
they read this back in the office. They went livid. |
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By Paul Hales
December 11, 2001
The Inquirer |
THE LAUNCH OF INTEL'S 845B0 (i845-D) chipset next week is
expected to boost demand for DDR memory, possibly pushing up
prices and bringing some relief to embattled memory makers.
But with the Dramurai gearing up for the boost in demand by
ramping up production of the much-vaunted memory chips,
oversupply is once again a possibility in the coming months –
once the shortage is overcome… |
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By Mike Magee
December 10, 2001
The Inquirer |
THE LINUX LASSES AND LADS appear to have added further
hyperthreading support to Intel's Pentium 4 chip. Intel told
the INQUIRER back in August that hyperthreading would be
introduced on server versions of its processors in 2002, but
as we have reported here earlier, there appears no real
obstacle for the introduction in the desktop chip too.
A bigger obstacle is a running row going on between
Microsoft and Intel as to how hyperthreading and SMT affects
licence fees. |
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By Paul Hales
December 11, 2001
The Inquirer |
THE HYPERTRANSPORT CONSORTIUM has published the spec of its
open standard in this PDF here. Hypertransport is the
interconnect technology embraced by AMD to build scalable
multi-processor systems. A leading member of the
Hypertransport Consortium, AMD has long trumpeted the benefits
of the interconnect over the Intel-sponsored 3GIO. The
Consortium says the interconnect is, "designed to enable the
chips inside of PCs, servers, networking and communications
devices to communicate with each other up to 48 times faster
than existing bus technologies".
nVidia was first to commercially implement Hypertransport
in its AMD-only nForce 'platform'. |
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December 10,
2001
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By Douglas F. Gray
December 6, 2001
Infoworld |
VIA TECHNOLOGIES APPEARS to have chalked up another victory
this week in its ongoing chip-set patent infringement legal
battle with Intel, but it did so by changing a product so as
not to infringe on the patent, Intel said Thursday. A judge
in the U.S. District Court of Northern California Wednesday
granted Via a summary judgment in a lawsuit Santa Clara,
Calif.-based Intel filed in 1999. In making the ruling, the
judge said that Via demonstrated to the court that it had
modified the chip set enough so that it doesn't violate
Intel's patent, said Intel spokesman Chuck Mulloy. |
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By Chris Hall
December 10, 2001
Electronic News |
Taiwanese chip design house Via Technologies Inc. is in
expansion mode and, for the past three years or so, has gone
about acquiring processor companies Cyrix and Centaur
Technology, all the while thumbing its nose at mighty Intel
Corp. In mid-October, Via announced the next phase of its
development, the formation of the Via Platform Solutions
Division (VPSD), which specifically will make motherboards,
the components board that lie at the heart of PCs and a great
many other devices. Currently embroiled in a legal wrangle
with Intel Corp. in which both sides are suing the other for
patent infringement—not to mention the impact of a severe
downturn in the semiconductor industry—Via is making a bold
move. The formation of VPSD allows the fabless design company
to simultaneously optimize board designs using Via chipsets
while specifically offering motherboards fitted with its
P4X266 chipset, which is designed to support systems based on
the Intel Pentium 4 processor. |
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December 6, 2001
Semiconductor Business News |
Taiwan's Via Technologies Inc. here today announced a new I/O
technology that boosts the overall performance in PC systems.
Via's new so-called VPX Modular I/O Expansion Technology
consists of a new 64-bit PCI controller. Dubbed the VPX-64,
the device allows Via's double-data-rate (DDR) SDRAM-based
chip sets to support 64-bit PCI in both the 33-MHz and 66-MHz
modes.
The device enables Via's VIA Apollo chip sets to offer up
to 533-megabytes of PCI data throughput for high-bandwidth
applications, like Gigabit Ethernet and Ultra SCSI/320. |
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Truths...from the rumor mill |
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By Mike
Magee
December
7, 2001
The Inquirer |
THANKS
TO Firestone for pointing us to a Web page which
shows that the 845D DDR Intel chipset is as real as real can
be. If a CPU is the "brains" of a computer (cough), the
chipset could be likened to the "nervous system" (cough),
while a keyboard is just a keyboard.
The Japanese site Akiba Hotline has pictures of a number of
boards which use the chipset, which Intel doesn't want to tell
the press - that is us - about until January 2002. |
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By Mike
Magee
December
7, 2001
The Inquirer |
WHILE
WALL STREET is certain to be cheered by AMD's and Intel's
upbeat forecasts for Q4 yesterday, things may not be quite as
rosy as the press releases appear to show. Andy Bryant,
chief financial officer of Intel, faced a Q&A from the
financial analyst pack yesterday evening and it's clear that,
once more, the corporation is having to perform one of its
customary juggling acts.
Gross margins for INTC will be around the 47 per cent mark,
which would be a yield many companies would kill for, but
revenues are not that significantly higher than the firm
predicted. |