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To: Ibexx who wrote (3078)2/18/1998 11:53:00 AM
From: Estephen  Respond to of 93625
 
to all: from foxnews.com
(does convington have a rambus interface?)

Intel CEO Shows Chip for Sub-$1,000 PCs
6.34 a.m. ET (1134 GMT) February 18, 1998

SAN FRANCISCO - Intel Corp. Chairman Andrew Grove the first
public demonstration of a new processor, code-named ''Covington,''
it is developing for the booming market for PCs costing less than
$1,000.

Grove said Intel will shortly launch a new brand name for this
product line, to distinguish it from its higher-end product family,
aimed at different market segments.

In a speech in San Jose, Calif., Grove also described how Intel
plans to target products for all segments of the computer industry,
ranging from the low-cost, under-$1,000 market to mainframe-class
computer servers that run giant corporations.

"The Intel architecture is extending into more segments of
computing,'' Grove said.

The first model of the new Covington processor - aimed at what
Intel calls the "basic computing'' segment - will use the same P6
architecture in Intel's Pentium II line, with less costly packaging.
Grove reiterated Intel's previous statements that the Covington chip
will be shipped in mid-1998.

Grove demonstrated Covington at a forum of about 1,000 hardware
developers, designers and engineers of Intel-based products,
running education software called Body Works.

"This is clearly an interesting way to bring the Pentium II
technology down to a lower price point. They are not sacrificing
much,'' said Nathan Brookwood, a Dataquest Inc. analyst. "They
have taken the ancillary costs out of the chip (with the lower-cost
packaging).''

The first version of Covington will also not include level two (L2)
cache, which stores the information and the order in which the
processor performs its executions, but later versions will.
Brookwood said any performance differences in the first Covington
because of the lack of L2 cache would be "very subtle'' and not
noticeable by most mainstream computer users.

While Grove did not disclose Intel's expected pricing for the new
chip, Brookwood said Intel has to price Covington in the range of
$100 to $150 to be used in sub-$1,000 PCs.

Brookwood also estimated Intel will launch the first Covington chip
at speeds of about 266 megahertz.

The sub-$1,000 PC market is a booming sector of the PC industry,
and the average price of PCs continues to fall.

According to data released Tuesday by Computer Intelligence of La
Jolla, Calif, the total market share of sub-$1,000 PCs slipped
slightly in December to about 30 percent of the retail market, as the
average purchase price for desktop PCs dropped to below $1,300
for the first time.

Grove also discussed Intel's plans for higher-end products, and new
packaging for the workstation and high-performance computing
segments, called Slot 2. Currently, Intel's Pentium II line has a
packaging cartridge that holds the processor in the computer, called
Slot I, a more costly packaging than the older PC packaging called
Socket 7.

The new Slot 2 design will allow for even higher frequency, or
speedier, processors to be used in multiprocessing systems and
high-performance workstations, systems and servers.

Grove also said Intel plans to launch a brand extension of the
Pentium II processor family brand name, to be associated with
high-performance computing.



To: Ibexx who wrote (3078)2/20/1998
From: Duane L. Olson  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 93625
 
IBexx...I took the risk..I read it... So how do you evaluate H&Q projection of $100?... Willing to share a thought or two? Thanks.. Duane