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To: MileHigh who wrote (26577)8/6/1999 2:28:00 PM
From: unclewest  Respond to of 93625
 
more great news!!!

08/06 12:24 EST

Pentium IIIs To Get Faster System Bus

Aug 06, 1999 (Tech Web - CMP via COMTEX) -- When Intel introduces a
new version of its Pentium III chips with a faster system bus, VARs
will not have to pay a price premium for the advanced feature,
according to sources.

On Sept. 27, Intel plans to roll out two Pentium III processors
operating at 600 MHz and 533 MHz, both with a 133-MHz front-side bus,
sources said.

The chips will accompany the introduction of the 820 chip set, formerly
code-named Camino, which will support the 133-MHz system bus.

The new 600-MHz Pentium III will cost $669 in volume quantities,
industry sources said. On Monday, Intel released a 600-MHz Pentium III
with the standard 100-MHz front-side bus for $669.

Intel declined to comment on unannounced products. The company had
previously planned to introduce the 820 in mid-1999. However, it
announced early this year that the chip set's schedule slipped to the
third quarter. The chip set will support the faster Direct Rambus DRAM
and 4x AGP.

The faster front-side bus will boost the bandwidth between the
processor and system components such as main memory.

"From a performance standpoint, it's great," said Lou Artale, president
at PC Strategies, a Canton, Ohio-based VAR. "All the more performance,
the better."

Athlon, the new processor from Advanced Micro Devices, Sunnyvale,
Calif., has a 200-MHz system bus.

At the same time it introduces the 820, Intel plans on rolling out an
enhanced version of its 810 integrated chip set, the 810e, for Pentium
III systems, sources said.

While 820 targets desktop systems, Intel also plans an 840 chip set
with similar features targeting workstations and servers. A hardware
source said Intel planned to introduce that chip set at the same time
as Coppermine, an enhanced version of the Pentium III built on the
advanced 0.18-micron process.

Intel officials in June said Coppermine was delayed from late September
to November. At the time, Intel said a mobile version of Coppermine
operating at 500 MHz would be introduced in September.

On Thursday, Intel denied reports that the mobile chip was delayed, and
a spokesman said the official introduction timeline remained unchanged
from the second half.

-0-

Copyright (C) 1999 CMP Media Inc.