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To: Orion who wrote (30666)9/25/1999 6:06:00 PM
From: richard surckla  Respond to of 93625
 
Orion... here it is:

Intel Delays High-End PCs

Problems crop up with the next-generation 820
chip set's controversial Rambus memory design.

by Tom Spring, PC World
September 24, 1999, 8:30 a.m. PT

In a stunning last-minute change of plans, Intel has
postponed the launch of its highest-performance PCs,
previously scheduled for Monday.

Calling system vendors on Thursday night, Intel
acknowledged memory problems associated with the
Rambus memory design in its 820 chip set. Intel
reportedly found a "memory bit error" that curtails top
memory capacity and speed. Intel has declined
comment on the situation.

The stumble will affect high-end computers designed to
run the fastest Pentium III processors. In this niche,
"everybody is going to be reeling: Compaq, IBM,
Hewlett Packard, Dell, and Gateway," says Kevin
Knox, Gartner Group research director.

The Intel 820 system chip sets support a faster system
bus (133 MHz versus 100 MHz) and 4X Accelerated
Graphics Ports (AGP) as well as Rambus DRAM
(RDRAM) and other memory architectures.

Rambus is the company that designed and licensed
RDRAM technology to memory manufacturers. The 820
chip set is expected to boost memory speeds as high
as 800 MHz.

Vendors Get the Bad News

Compaq was contacted late Thursday by Intel and told
that the 820 chip set was flawed. Compaq had planned
to announce a line of DeskPros, scheduled to be
available next month, but those plans have been
postponed, says Jim Cortese, Compaq public relations
manager.

"Intel contacted us and said it was experiencing
technical problems with their 820 chip set," Cortese
says. "That's all we were told."

"Dell engineers have determined systems based on the
820 are not production-ready and therefore we have
postponed introduction," says Jon Weisblatt, Dell
spokesperson. He confirmed Intel contacted Dell about
a flaw in the 820.

Dell says customers will receive marketing material
advertising PCs supporting the 820. Dell will be
informing customers that those systems will be
available only after Intel corrects flaws to the chip sets.

Scrap Them?

Some observers have speculated that system vendors
may need to rebuild large numbers of PCs or ship them
with performance limitations--or scrap them altogether.

Peter Glaskowsky, an analyst with Microdesign
Resources, says that vendors might be stuck with as
many as half a million systems that need to be
scrapped.

Glaskowsky says 820 problems center around a third
Rambus memory slot on motherboards originally
intended to boost performance of the chipset.
According to Glaskowsky, Intel discovered the third
slot generates memory errors--and motherboards with
three slots will have to be scrapped.

Compaq doesn't face that problem because the final
chip sets have not yet arrived, Cortese says.

Squabbling with System Vendors

Gartner Group's Knox says Intel's misstep will rock
already contentious relations between Intel and PC
makers who have been bickering over the pricey 820
chip set. "We might see a lot of computer makers
going with alternative chip set makers," Knox says.

Micron has already made that move: Its
next-generation computer platform will be based not on
Intel's upcoming 820 system chip set, but rather on a
VIA Technologies alternative. The move, Micron says,
will save customers between $200 to $300 over
systems with the 820 chip set, without sacrificing
system performance.

While the 820 delay is major news for customers
demanding absolutely peak performance, it is a
nonevent for most customers, says Knox. "Nobody
was betting on the 820 being the leading chip set for
another six months," he says, since conventional
systems offer plenty of horsepower for most
applications.

810e-Based Systems Go Ahead

Vendors will proceed with plans to announce lower-cost
systems based on Intel's 810e chip set on Monday.

This silicon targets budget Pentium III PCs. Like the
existing 810 chip set for Celeron systems, it integrates
adequate but not stellar AGP graphics in order to save
cost. The 810e doesn't support RDRAM, and you can't
upgrade graphics later. It supports a 133-MHZ or older
system bus, PC-100 memory, and UltraDMA/66 hard
drives.

Additional reporting by Yardena Arar.