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To: Dan3 who wrote (135516)5/19/2001 12:59:55 PM
From: Joseph Pareti  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 186894
 
INTEL ANSWERS AMD WITH "TUALATIN" 05.18.01
COMMERCIAL NEWS HPCwire
==============================================================================

John G. Spooner reported for ZDNet News: Delivering a counterpunch to rival
Advanced Micro Devices and its new 1GHz Athlon 4 chip, Intel will launch five
new mobile Pentium III chips this July, sources said. The chips -- code-named
Tualatin (pronounced "TWO-ala-tin") -- will be the first new and faster
Pentium III chips in more than a year, boasting clock speeds of up to 1.13GHz,
according to sources familiar with Intel's plans.

The fastest new mobile Pentium IIIs will compete with AMD's Athlon 4 chip --
announced Monday -- a mobile version of the Athlon that runs at speeds as high
as 1GHz.

The five Tualatin chips will run at clock speeds of 866MHz, 933MHz, 1GHz,
1.06GHz and 1.13GHz.

The new chips give Intel two other things it needs to compete in the mobile
market: lower power consumption and possibly improved manufacturing yields.

The Tualatin "answers the competition on all fronts," said Mike Feibus,
principal analyst at Mercury Research. "I don't see it as a knockout punch,
but I do see it as an effective counter" to competitors.

The chips are being built using the company's new 0.13-micron manufacturing
process.

The transition from the current 0.18-micron process to the new process
provides a number of advantages. It allows for the increases in clock speed
while reducing the physical size of the chip, letting Intel manufacture a
greater number of chips per single silicon wafer. At the same time, the chips
will consume less power.

The five new Pentium IIIs will sport a 133MHz front side bus -- the data
pipeline that connects the chip to other PC components, such as memory -- and
are also expected to feature improvements including a larger 512KB Level 2
cache and a new version of Intel's SpeedStep notebook battery-saving
technology.

SpeedStep, in its current form, allows a mobile Pentium III to scale back in
clock speed and voltage to save power when a notebook switches to batteries.
This second version of SpeedStep will take that further, allowing the chip to
switch between the chip's lowest clock speed and lowest voltage setting to its
maximum voltage and clock speed settings.

"This improves on what we've done" in the past, said Don MacDonald, director
of marketing for Intel's mobile products group.

Though he wouldn't comment on clock speeds or the timing of Intel's Tualatin
launch, MacDonald said the chipmaker's goal is to continue to dominate the
market for mobile chips.

"We are committed to having the highest-performance and the lowest-power"
mobile processors, MacDonald said. "There's a road map of (Tualatin-based
mobile) products coming out throughout the year.

"The advantage is two ways, depending on how you spin some dials," he said,
referring to the ability to increase clock speed or to decrease power
consumption on slower Pentium III chips.

As a result, Intel also plans to launch low-power versions of the Tualatin
Pentium III chips later this year for smaller-sized notebooks. The chips will
stick to the same or lower power consumption as the current line of low-power
Pentium III processors but will offer higher clock speeds.

These lower-power chips will aim to fend off Transmeta's progress with its
Crusoe processor in small-sized notebooks, such as the recently announced
Toshiba Libretto L1.

After the launch of the Tualatin mobile chips, Intel plans a host of other
processors based on the new Pentium III design. The chipmaker will also launch
new Pentium III desktop and Xeon server processors based on Tualatin. The
desktop Pentium III chips are expected at speeds of 1.13GHz and 1.2GHz.
However, Intel is not expected to aggressively market Tualatin Pentium III
chips for the desktop.

A new chipset will also accompany the Tualatin mobile chips. The chipset,
code-named Almador-M (for "mobile"), offers improvements intended to
complement the new processors, including support for PC133 memory. It also
offers a 133MHz bus.

Intel will, over time, move all of its chips to the new 0.13-micron process.
The chipmaker will, for example, move the desktop Pentium 4 chip to 0.13
micron in the fourth quarter. A mobile version of the Pentium 4 will ship in
the first half of 2002.

The name "Tualatin" comes from the Tualatin river, located near Intel's
Hillsboro, Ore., facilities, where the new chips were designed and are being
manufactured in small quantities.



To: Dan3 who wrote (135516)5/19/2001 2:26:17 PM
From: dale_laroy  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
>PS - If the IBM/AMD .13 / copper / SOI process were to pan out as hoped, AMD could dominate the mobile and SHV server markets 18 months from now.<

AMD probably will dominate the mobile market segment 18 months from now, at least with regards to number of units shipped.

But servers will probably be another story entirely. Not sure what SHV means, so maybe you will be right depending on the meaning. Thoroughbred should get AMD into the thin server market, and Barton could enable AMD to dominate in this market. But Sledgehammer will be needed to properly address the 4-8 processor server market, and Sledgehammer won't become a major market force until well into H1 2003.