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Technology Stocks : Intel Corporation (INTC)
INTC 39.36-0.1%Jan 5 3:59 PM EST

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To: Raymond Thomas who started this subject5/29/2002 12:35:49 AM
From: maui_dude  Read Replies (2) of 186894
 
Intel's Itanium 2 Performance Twice That of Itanium

biz.yahoo.com

SANTA CLARA, Calif. (Reuters) - Intel Corp., the world's largest semiconductor manufacture, said on Wednesday that its next-generation Itanium 2 processor aimed at high-end servers and super computers performs as much as 2 times better than computers using first-generation Itanium chips.

The chipmaker, based in Santa Clara, California, also said that Itanium, Intel's (NasdaqNM:INTC - News) second 64-bit chip, is on track to be introduced in the middle of this year. A 64-bit chip crunches data in 64-bit chunks, compared with 32-bit chunks found in Intel's current Pentium and Xeon processors.

Because the chip can crunch more data in the same amount of time, it boosts the performance of the processor, which is aimed at supercomputers and high-end servers used by financial services, insurance companies and in other industries that maintain and manipulate vast amounts of data.

The Itanium 2 chip will power systems designed to compete with high-end systems from Sun Microsystems Inc. and International Business Machines Corp.

The performance boost comes partly from higher data speeds on the chip itself and enhancements to the chip's microarchitecture, Intel said.

Mike Fister, who heads Intel's enterprise platforms group, is expected to detail the performance boost in a speech on Wednesday at the Intel Developer Forum in Munich, a gathering of engineers who design software and systems using Intel chips.

Itanium 2 has 3 megabytes of level 3 memory cache on the Itanium die itself and will run at a frequency of 1 gigahertz, Intel said.

Successive generations of Itanium, code-named Madison and Deerfield are expected in the middle of 2003 and Montecito is due out in 2004, said Shannon Poulin, enterprise marketing manager for Itanium at Intel.

"We expect the beat to go on with Madison, Deerfield and Montecito," Poulin said. "We expect these performance improvements to really power the Itanium family moving forward."
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