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To: greenspirit who wrote (43359)12/29/1997 8:26:00 PM
From: Joey Smith  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 186894
 
Article on PII price cuts:
joey

PC boxes, Pentium II
prices shrink
By Jim Davis
December 29, 1997, 2:20 p.m. PT

update New, compact, mimimalist designs for
sub-$1,000 personal computers are emerging from
major manufacturers. Meanwhile, Intel has cut the
price on its Pentium II processor to spur low-cost
Pentium II PC sales.

The price cuts affect the 233-MHz Pentium II
processor which has been slashed from $401 to
$268. "It is in effect today," said an Intel
spokesperson. "There have been no other price
cuts," he added. The next across-the-board price
cuts are scheduled for February, he said.

Pricing for systems based on the 233-MHz
Pentium II processor has dipped below $2,000 for
some models from major manufacturers.

As prices for chips drop, consumer PC vendors
are creating new minimalist designs to
accommodate the burgeoning low-cost consumer
PC market.

Recently introduced consumer PCs from
Hewlett-Packard, Compaq, and others reveal a
trend toward reduced size.

HP's 3100 is an $899 PC that comes with a
166-MHz Pentium MMX chip, 16MB of memory,
a 2.0GB hard drive, and a CD-ROM drive. The
unit itself is surprisingly compact and
lightweight--the size of a slim VCR--much like
Compaq's Presario 2200, another sub-$1,000 PC.

Compaq, in addition to selling the small, black
2200, offers a $999 mini-tower enclosure system
called the 4505 that comes with a 166-MHz
Pentium MMX processor and a 2.1GB hard drive.
The system weighs 15 pounds less than a typical
full-sized tower system from Compaq and is almost
three inches shorter and seven inches shallower.

These systems shed bulk primarily as a result
having fewer expansion slots and drive bays
inside--features that often go unused by consumers.

With the inside of the box requiring less open space
for additions such as new hard drives, the case
itself can be made smaller. Manufacturers save
money both by reducing the number of components
and the amount of material used to encase the PC's
electronic "guts."

In a way, the new-look systems hark back to the
original Apple Macintosh systems, which offered
few expansion capabilities but came with all the
components, also including a small black and white
monitor, in one compact and relatively portable
unit. The HP and Compaq systems have separate
monitors, but Georgia-based Monorail offers an
update on the all-in-one design, with a system that
has an LCD display and the PC's core components
stored behind the monitor in a slim case.

Other recent innovations are the result of PC
vendors trying to separate, rather than combine,
functional units. For instance, components such as
the CD-ROM and floppy drives--which need to be
accessed frequently--are stored in a small cube or
pizza-box-sized unit that is separate from the main
system, as is the case with IBM's S-series Aptivas
and some of NEC's Ready-series systems.

The downsizing trend seen in some sub-$1,000
PCs will likely show up in more consumer systems
next year for another reason: The appearance of
the "home server" device.

Many homes already have two PCs, and by next
year there will be a greater array of gear that offers
networking capabilities, including mobile phones,
handheld PC companion devices, and digital TV
set-top computers, which could offer a "pipe" (or
conduit) to the Internet for the other devices in the
house.

Without a home server, consumers would have to
get an Internet account for each piece of hardware.
But the home server will allow home users to
streamline their communication links. Some
Japanese companies are expected to start selling
low cost home servers as soon as next year. (See
related story)