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To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (152590)12/14/2001 6:05:06 PM
From: SilentZ  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 186894
 
>Other than that, I'm sure mobile Northwood can scale easily. ;-) Keep in mind that there was a time when AMD intro'd a mobile K6-2 that had worse power consumption than the mobile Celeron at the time, but had higher clock speeds. Battery life was shorter, but it was a successful move on AMD's part. It was so successful that Intel drove mobile Celeron speeds up, even beyond mobile Pentium II for a while.

Does anyone have the power consumption specs on these beasts? (Mobile K6-2 and mobile- uh, what was the codename for the mobile Celeron back then?)

-Z



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (152590)12/14/2001 8:25:54 PM
From: Paul Engel  Respond to of 186894
 
It is scheduled to launch notebooks running on the Mobile Pentium 4 in March and will begin replacing some of its older Pentium III models in the first quarter of 2002.

digitimes.com



Asustek notebook shipments to almost meet full-year target



Emma Wang, Taipei; Willie Teng, DigiTimes.com [Wednesday 12 December 2001]

On December 11, Johnny Shih, chairman of Asustek Computer, said that the company’s notebook shipments for 2001 will reach 750,000-800,000 units, and the company is aiming to double the figure next year. The Taiwan-based company previously projected notebook shipments of 800,000 units for this year.

Asustek shipped a record 105,000 units in November, bringing this year’s cumulative shipments through November to 695,000 units.

The company shipped 169,000 units in 1999 and 375,000 units in 2000. Both figures were lower than company projections.

On the same day, Asustek also introduced the S1 high-end notebook supporting Intel’s Mobile Pentium III. It is scheduled to launch notebooks running on the Mobile Pentium 4 in March and will begin replacing some of its older Pentium III models in the first quarter of 2002.