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To: hlpinout who wrote (89413)2/1/2001 6:55:20 AM
From: hlpinout  Respond to of 97611
 
January 31, 2001 8:18am

Intel set to unleash new handheld
chips

By John G. Spooner ZDNet News

Intel is preparing samples of its XScale processor,
as well as prototypes of the type of handheld
devices it can be used in, as competition heats up
in the portable market.

The Santa Clara, Calif.-based chipmaker next quarter
will send out prototype XScale systems--featuring
flat-panel screens and keyboards--that will effectively
make it easier for manufacturers to examine how Intel's
chips might work in reality.

Whether the eventual products are called cell phones or
PDAs (personal digital assistants) will likely be a
matter of opinion.

"I think you'll see parallel development at the PDA and
cellular handset manufacturers ... and I also think you'll
start to see devices that cross over" between the two
kinds of devices, said Vishwas Deshmane, marketing
manager for Intel's Personal Internet Client Architecture
(PICA), which includes XScale.

While Intel traditionally provides this kind of prototype
for new processor designs, a lot is riding on XScale.
With the future of PC sales looking dull, the company
wants to sell chips like XScale that power PDAs and
pagers.

XScale acceptance also will drive sales of flash memory
and other chips. Together, all of these products are tied
up in the PICA blueprint for wireless devices announced
last September.

Rival Texas Instruments is promoting a similar
architecture, the Open Multimedia Applications
Platform (OMAP). Whichever company gets the most
adherents, analysts say, wins.

So far, Intel has carved out a fairly substantial foothold
in the PDA market with the StrongARM processor, the
predecessor to its XScale chip. Several manufacturers,
including Compaq Computer and Hewlett-Packard, use
StrongARM chips in their handheld devices.


Palm also is expected to join. The company will start to
incorporate StrongARM chips into its handhelds next
year with the release of version 5.0 of the company's
operating systems. Sources have said the leading
candidate is XScale.

XScale will offer higher clock speeds and lower power
consumption than current StrongARMs, depending on
the application. The chip can range from 50MHz, where
it consumes about 10 milliwatts of power, to 800MHz,
where it consumes about 1 watt.

PCA blueprints will also be tailored for the price
spectrum. Some will provide plans for building a
high-end product, while others will target the budget
market.

More news will come out midyear, said Deshmane,
while XScale-powered PDAs and pagers should appear
around the holiday season.

Speed drains the batteries
While the chip can range up to 800MHz in its current
form, manufacturers will likely use less clock speed to
save on batteries.

"I would assume that in this year, people would actually
dial it down," said Gene Matter, chief architect for Intel's
Wireless Communications and Computing Group.

The "sweet spot" for this year's PDA offerings using
XScale should be around 266MHz or 300MHz, he
added.

Still, as with PCs, more speed could rapidly become a
necessity.

"If you look at the current-generation Pocket PCs, it
seems like (206MHz) should be enough, but it's not for
some applications," said Kevin Burden, a senior analyst
at IDC in Framingham, Mass.

Intel faces a huge challenge. Handspring, Sony, Nokia
and Ericsson all have already signed on to support TI's
OMAP architecture. The two different
architectures--OMAP and PICA--share a number of
similarities. Both, for instance, revolve around a
StrongARM processor. One of the biggest differences
between the two is that OMAP recommends using TI
processors, while Intel's showcases Intel technology.

Still, Intel landed a joint-development agreement with
Mitsubishi for a new cellular phone chipset last May.

Other Asia-Pacific companies could be some of the first
to start adopting the PICA architecture, sources at Intel
have said. A number of Taiwan and Singapore-based
contract manufacturers and others are increasing the
amount of work they do in the cellular phone market.