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Technology Stocks : Qualcomm Moderated Thread - please read rules before posting
QCOM 173.96+1.4%Nov 11 3:59 PM EST

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To: slacker711 who wrote (32274)2/12/2003 5:15:40 PM
From: John Biddle  Read Replies (1) of 196608
 
Intel to call on smart-phone chip
By Matthew Broersma , Special to ZDNet News
February 12, 2003, 6:28 AM PT

zdnet.com.com

Intel is expected to formally introduce its chip for smart phones this week, ahead of next week's 3GSM Congress wireless trade show.

The chip, code-named Manitoba, will offer enough processing power for more sophisticated applications, while its integrated design will allow longer battery life, according to Intel.

Manitoba, also known as the "wireless Internet on a chip," integrates flash memory, a digital signal processor and an XScale processor core onto a single chip. It will be targeted at mobile phone makers developing products for high-speed wireless networks, such as GPRS (General Pack Radio Service) networks. Manitoba will help in the development of phones that let people wirelessly access the Web and play audio files, as well as make basic phone calls.

At 3GSM, Intel will focus on Manitoba along with Centrino, a set of technologies that will include the processor code-named Banias, a chipset and a Wi-Fi module.

Intel said that both products are examples of the company's increasing efforts to integrate new technologies into motherboards and directly into chip packaging. "That's where Intel's core competence is. (Integration) is happening with wireless LAN, and with other technologies like Bluetooth and GPRS," an Intel representative said.

The representative said that integrating the digital signal processor (DSP), flash memory and Xscale will allow for handsets with a sleeker design and more sophisticated applications.

Centrino, Banias and Manitoba are all part of Intel's effort to create products outside the PC realm, such as ones for the lucrative market of mobile phones and wireless networking. The Manitoba chip is designed to put pressure on chipmakers such as Texas Instruments and Motorola, which already offer integrated wireless processors. Other chipmakers also integrate DSP and application processors onto a single chip, although the inclusion of memory is more unusual.
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