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Technology Stocks : Intel Corporation (INTC) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Joseph Pareti who wrote (140264)7/27/2001 4:40:40 AM
From: Joseph Pareti  Respond to of 186894
 
INTEL LIGHTS A FUSE UNDER PENTIUM 4

where is ueberclockmeister ? or Anand ? :-)
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07.20.01
COMMERCIAL NEWS HPCwire
==============================================================================

John G. Spooner reported ZDNet News: Intel is preparing a Pentium 4 blitz for
the remainder of 2001, aiming to drive the chip into the heart of the desktop
PC market before the end of the year, executives said Tuesday during a
conference call after the chipmaker's second-quarter earnings announcement.
Intel intends to accelerate its Pentium 4 road map, cranking the clock speed
of the chip past 2GHz before the end of the year. Although 2GHz-plus speeds
have been expected for some time, Intel will likely introduce them sooner.

Introducing faster Pentium 4's sooner will allow the company to aggressively
cut prices on existing chips, as its ultimate goal is not so much to offer the
fastest PC processor but to drive Pentium 4 into all Intel-based desktop PCs
priced at $800 and higher.

The move will increase the chip's presence in the mainstream part of the PC
market while collapsing the current pricing gap between PCs based on Intel's
Pentium III and systems based on the Pentium 4 processor. The end result will
be a full transition from Pentium III to Pentium 4 on the desktop before the
end of the year, said Paul Otellini, executive vice president and general
manager of Intel's Architecture Group.

Intel previously expected the Pentium 4 to dominate its desktop PC market in
early 2002.

Intel will rely heavily on its forthcoming 845 chipset, expected in September,
and on demand generated by the introduction of Microsoft's Windows XP to help
drive sales of Pentium 4 PCs.

The 845 chipset will allow the Pentium 4 to work with standard SDRAM memory
instead of with costlier RDRAM. The chipset "will begin volume shipment to
customers within two weeks, well ahead of schedule," Otellini said. "We are
poised for a high-volume introduction (of 845) to coincide with the
back-to-school season."

The lower price of the 845, combined with use of lower-priced SDRAM, will help
PC makers shave the cost of their Pentium 4 PCs. Intel says the chipset has
been designed into more than 250 motherboards worldwide.

By pushing to higher clock speeds, Intel will increase its slowest Pentium 4
to 1.5GHz, cutting prices on the chip to move it into the mainstream of the
market by the end of the year. Meanwhile, it will take the highest-performing
Pentium 4 above 2GHz in the same time frame, Otellini said.

"On pricing, we will do what we need to do to transition from the Pentium III
to the Pentium 4," he told analysts.

"We have had a goal of accelerating (the Pentium 4 transition), and now we
have a firm plan and road map in place to achieve this," he said.

Analysts said it's about time Intel juiced up its plans.

"All this points to (Intel) becoming more competitive," said Mike Feibus,
principal analyst with Mercury Research. Intel "needs Pentium 4 top to bottom
to do that."

"This didn't just hit them," Feibus added. "What's different from last quarter
is that they now have the vehicle to do that: the 845."

Intel believes the combination of its accelerated Pentium 4 road map and
faster Celeron chips "will put us in a position to gain market share
throughout the second half and beyond," Otellini said.

Intel has seen some of its market share captured by rival Advanced Micro
Devices in the last year. AMD now claims 22 percent of the market, up slightly
from the second quarter, when it garnered just below 21 percent.

As it boosts Pentium 4, Intel also has big plans for its desktop Celeron chip.
It will use Celeron to protect the back door--PCs priced at $800 and lower.

Intel will boost the Celeron chip to 1GHz and then transition it to its
0.13-micron manufacturing process as the second half of the year progresses.
The new process will help push clock speeds past 1GHz, boosting the
performance of budget PCs. At the same time, it will reduce chipmaking costs.

The Pentium III will live as the Pentium III-M in mobile products through 2002
and likely at least until early 2003 in various forms. Pentium III-M,
manufactured using Intel's new 0.13-micron process, is otherwise known as
Tualatin. The chip will be introduced later in the month at speeds faster than
1GHz, Intel executives confirmed during the conference call.

But the Pentium III is nearly dead on the desktop. Intel recently began
shipping a 1.1GHz Pentium III based on its current 0.18-micron manufacturing
process. That chip is available from PC makers such as Gateway.

But faster Tualatin desktop Pentium IIIs will be few and far between, Intel
executives said.