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To: Jim McMannis who wrote (38754)11/3/1997 10:32:00 AM
From: Paul Dieterich  Respond to of 186894
 
Intel muscles into the handheld PC market (see bottom paragraph):

Mini-notebook uses new Intel chip

By Jim Davis and Brooke Crothers

October 31, 1997, 1:00 p.m. PT

Toshiba will chime in on Monday with a new version of its
diminutive mini-notebook which uses Intel's newest
processor for these ultrasmall computers.

Last week, Intel quietly released a new 120-MHz mobile
MMX Pentium for mini-notebooks which uses less power
and generates less heat than the mobile Pentium
commonly found in notebook PCs.

The updated 1.8-pound Libretto will pack the 120-MHz
processor, a significant jump from the aging 75-MHz
Pentium chip the Libretto currently uses. The Libretto will
also come with a larger 1.6GB hard drive, according to
Toshiba. The current Libretto uses a 800MB hard drive.

The price will remain at $1,999, according to Toshiba.

Other vendors are using the new Intel chip too. NEC has
released MobioNX mini-notebook in Japan with the
processor for about $2,000. The company did not indicate
if it would release this model in the U.S. Fujitsu is already
selling a mini-notebook in Japan.

The Mitsubishi Amity mini-notebook, interestingly, uses a
133-MHz chip, not the special ultra-low-power chip which
NEC and Toshiba use.

These tiny machines, usually well under three pounds,
offer some of the advantages of a six-pound notebook:
They run a full-fledged version of Windows 95--allowing
users to run all their usual software--and come with
relatively large hard drives. Typically, they also boast
high-quality active-matrix LCD screens.

This contrasts with Windows CE handheld computers,
which run a stripped-down version of Windows, have no
hard drive, and are really only meant as an ancillary device
to a desktop PC. While they are cramped, mini-notebook
keyboards, like the one on the Libretto, are also more
useable than Windows CE computer keyboards.

The mini-notebook market appears to have come out of
left field and is principally driven by notebook makers'
innovations--not Microsoft or Intel, which typically
engineer new markets.

Interestingly, the new Intel chip could bring the chip giant
into a market where it has been virtually absent.
Competing handheld PCs which use the Windows CE
operating system run on processors such as Hitachi's
SH-3 processor, MIPS processors from Silicon Graphics,
and the ARM processor from Advanced RISC
Machines--but none currently use Intel processors.



To: Jim McMannis who wrote (38754)11/3/1997 11:59:00 AM
From: Mary Cluney  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
Jim, >>> Mary, You really should learn more about computers.<<<

For guys like you, it should not matter. You could make money on the way up or on the way down. In fact computer arcana can only get in your way. I'm saying this now for your own good <ggg>, stop pretending that you know something about this field. Go back to your TA, cryptic one-liners, alchemy, and other elixirs and make lots of money.

Regards,

Mary