Cumine 512K L2 w/200MHz fsb coming next year.
This will probably be Intel's mid-range processor until Willy gets a non-DRDRAM platform. This article says Northwood, the next Willy, won't come out for a year, but for some reason that seems to long away to me. If Intel wants to compete in volume, they will need a non-DRDRAM memory platform, and one year is too long to wait. Good for AMD though!
A .13 PIII will be VERY cheap to make for Intel and will also be an awesome notebook chip because it already doesn't consume much power in .18 compared to Athlon. When is AMD moving to .13? I think AMD can fight the faster PIIIs off without .13 if they come out with GHz+ processors in volume before the PIII, like the current situation. Intel will probably need to be lucky to eek out a 1.2GHz PIII in VOLUME with the latest stepping.
I prefer AMD's strategy - Duron low-mid range, Athlon mid-high end, as opposed to Intel's Timna ultra low end, Celeron low-mid, PIII mid-high, P4 ultra high. Maybe Timna will replace Celeron, but what happens if Timna +MTH is slower than Celeron? Duron will annihilate it in performance, but system pricing is an unknown.
Celeron finally going to move to 100MHz fsb, but Duron will still be faster. ____________________________________________________________
Intel preparing Northwood, Timna chips for 2001
By Michael Kanellos Staff Writer, CNET News.com August 10, 2000, 7:00 p.m. PT
The Pentium 4 is coming soon, but that is only the first of a number of products coming from Intel in the next 16 months.
The company is preparing to launch its Pentium 4 early in the fourth quarter and will then follow the release with a number of processors for different product segments, according to sources. The chip will run at 1.4 GHz, Intel has said.
Toward the end of the third quarter in 2001, the company will come out with Northwood, an improved version of the Pentium 4, according to Bert McComas, an analyst at InQuest Market Research. McComas examined Intel's most recent product roadmaps and posted an article on the roadmap on his company's web site.
Before that, in the middle of 2001, Intel will come out with Tualatin, a version of the Pentium III made on the 0.13-micron process, more advanced than the current 0.18-micron process, McComas said. The micron measurements refer to the size of certain features on the chip. By shrinking the features, a manufacturer can make the chip smaller as well as boost its performance.
Along with being faster, Tualatin will also contain a larger secondary cache, a bank of memory close to the processor that boosts performance, according to one source. Tualatin Pentium IIIs will contain 512KB of integrated cache, compared to 256KB of integrated cache on current Pentium IIIs.
Tualatin will also come with a 200-MHz system bus. The system bus serves as a data conduit between the processor and the rest of the computer. The current Pentium III system bus tops out at 133 MHz.
For the budget segment, the company will come out with Timna, an inexpensive version of Celeron containing a built-in graphics chip and a memory controller. In the following quarter, the company will release a version of Timna for mobile computers, sources said.
During this same time, the Celeron chip will be enhanced to contain a 100-MHz system bus. Current Celerons contain a 66-MHz system bus, which analysts have said throttles the overall performance of Celeron computers.
The Pentium 4 and its successors come at a pivotal time for the Santa Clara, Calif.-based chip maker. The company has not been able to meet demand for many of its processors since last November. The chronic shortages, combined with the success Advanced Micro Devices has enjoyed with Athlon, have allowed AMD to capture a substantial position in the consumer market.
The Pentium 4 is expected to give Intel the advantage over AMD in performance, according to analysts. However, if the company can't produce the chip in volume, PC manufacturers may continue to expand their use of Athlon processors. AMD, meanwhile, is aggressively trying to get into the market for business computers and has an ambitious chip roadmap of its own.
Northwood will be made on the 0.13-micron process, a more advanced manufacturing process than the current 0.18-micron process. The shift will allow Intel to boost the clock speed. Considering that Intel has said Pentium 4 will debut at 1.4 GHz, Northwood will run at least 2 GHz, one source predicted.
The chip will be matched with Rambus memory and standard SDRAM computer memory. The chip will also likely get matched with DDR DRAM, a competitor to Rambus, McComas said.
Overall, Rambus will occupy only a niche, he said. "It's a pretty clear admission that Intel is not going to make more of Rambus than the market is willing to make of it," he said. Intel could not be reached for comment and typically does not comment on product code names or unreleased products.
Nonetheless, Intel has already sketched out some of these plans in a general fashion. Paul Otellini, general manger of the Intel Architecture Group, for instance, has said that the Pentium III and Celeron would continue to be sold through 2001, making a transition to the 0.13-micron process inevitable. A shift to the 0.13-micron process for Pentium 4 has also been expected.
Intel executives have said that Pentium 4 will be ready for the holiday buying season in 2000 and come out at 1.4 GHz.
news.cnet.com
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