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To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (172978)2/10/2003 12:36:32 PM
From: The Duke of URLĀ©  Respond to of 186894
 
The VERY general answer to you question is to look at the balance sheet. Both diluted and non diluted figures are required to be stated there, under the owners equity section. Both in amount of dilution, and in stated diluted eps.

Also a quick check of total outstanding diluted shares from period to period gives an idea, but remember to contemplate stock spent for acquisitions of small companies that intel purchased with stock.



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (172978)2/10/2003 7:13:52 PM
From: herb will  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
Tenchusatsu, Re "Where in the "sea of data" can I find how much dilution is going on?"

From the Statement of Stockholders Equity which is included in the Annual Report.

Intel 2001

intel.com

AMD 2001

corporate.amd.com

Herb



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (172978)2/12/2003 1:38:06 AM
From: The Duke of URLĀ©  Respond to of 186894
 
And the hits just keep on happenin':

From the inquirer:

Dual-core Itanium Montecito to have 18MB cache

More than a billion transistors in 2005

By INQUIRER staff: Tuesday 11 February 2003, 16:27

GORDON MOORE'S WORDS HAVE ONLY JUST been heard on the idea of billion transistor chips and already Intel has plans for an Itanium that large. The Montecito revision of the Itanium is due in 2005 and it will be an enormous engineering feat.

Intel has let slip that the new processor will be a dual-core machine with more than twice as much cache as its Madison 2 predecessor. The Madison 2 has 9MB of level 3 cache so the Montecito will have at least 18MB of onchip memory, according to Heise Online.

The reason for such a large amount of memory is to allow each of the dual processors on the chip to have its own cache. Each processor also has its own level 1 and level 2 cache. This is going to be one very big chip.

The Madison 2 with 9MB of L3 cache is expected to use up to 130W of power at 1.5GHz, heaven knows how much power the Montecito will use. We already know that Intel will use a 90nm process to turn out this monster chip. µ