SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : AMD:News, Press Releases and Information Only! -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Francis Chow who wrote (5662)4/21/1998 12:09:00 AM
From: Brian Hutcheson  Respond to of 6843
 
biz.yahoo.com
New 1MB low voltage Flash memory (2.7v) , at 45nsec as fast as 5V flash .
To be used in organisers , pagers , test equipment .
Brian



To: Francis Chow who wrote (5662)4/21/1998 2:55:00 AM
From: Paul Engel  Respond to of 6843
 
Francis - More News from the Intel Thread

I think you will enjoy this.

Paul

{======================}

zdnet.com

Intel moves to accelerate
adoption of Xeon
processors

By Lisa DiCarlo, PC Week Online
04.20.98 6:15 pm ET

As Intel Corp. gears up for the
high-end Xeon processor, it is quickly
winding down its Pentium Processors
with MMX Technology and Pentium
Pro CPUs.

The Santa Clara, Calif., company said today that the Xeon
Pentium II processors, for high-end workstations and servers,
will be available in June. Pricing was not announced.

Xeon will replace the Pentium Pro, which has remained largely
unchanged since its introduction in November, 1995. As a
stopgap, Intel (INTC) last year doubled the Level 2 cache of the
Pentium Pro to 1MB. Despite its approximately $2,000 price
tag, server vendors ate it up, mainly because their customers
were in desperate need of an enhancement to the Pentium Pro
architecture.

But Intel executives expect a rapid crossover to Xeon-based
servers this summer, according to Paul Otellini, executive vice
president and general manager of Intel's Architecture Business
Group.

Although forthcoming Xeon processors have the same P6 core
as Pentium Pro, they differ in performance and packaging. For
example, Xeon has a full-speed backside bus, supports a
100MHz system bus and offers as much as 2MB of Level 2
cache.

Indeed, Intel will do all it can to accelerate the adoption of Xeon
with prepackaged server platforms-motherboards that include
the processor, chip set, RAM and other components-according
to sources.

For instance, Intel has a low-end server platform in the works,
code-named Nightshade, that includes two Xeon processors,
1GB of RAM, a 440BX chip set, graphics, integrated
management and I/O, sources said.

In the third quarter, Intel will release a four-way platform with the
forthcoming 450NX chip set, up to 8GB of RAM and a HotPlug
PCI, sources said. And in the fourth quarter, the company will
enable eight-way servers with Saber, the code name for a
platform using the Profusion chip set developed by its
subsidiary, Corollary Inc.

Such platforms will help accelerate the rate of adoption (OEMs
don't have to do their own design work) and bring down system
cost.

On the mainstream side of computing, Intel expects an even
more rapid move away from Pentium Processors with MMX
Technology to the Pentium II and Celeron.

The company has already stopped wafer starts on the chips
(meaning it has ceased production on the wafers from which
the chips are cut) and dramatically cut prices on Pentiums with
MMX and Pentium II chips.

Many PC makers, including Compaq Computer Corp., IBM
Personal Computer Co. and Hewlett-Packard Co., have
introduced sub-$900 systems based on MMX chips.

Intel and some PC makers, such as Dell Computer Corp.,
expect to cross over to Pentium IIs entirely by the third quarter.