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To: Mark Oliver who wrote (429)5/28/1998 3:02:00 PM
From: Mark Oliver  Respond to of 2025
 
Pentium II And Celeron Price Cuts Expected On June 7

<Picture>****Pentium II And Celeron Price Cuts Expected On June 7 05/28/98 SANTA CLARA, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1998 MAY 28 (NB) -- By Patrick McKenna, Newsbytes. Computer prices will continue to drop as Intel [NASDAQ:INTC] reports better than expected production of Pentium II and Celeron microprocessors. Intel won't take the next step and confirm rumored price cuts, but reliable sources say a 12 percent to 20 percent reduction on both lines will be announced on June 7.

The week of June 7 will keep Intel busy. Along with possible price reductions, the chipmaker is also expected to announce a new 300 megahertz (MHz) Celeron member to its line of microprocessors. A 266 MHz Celeron, designed to replace older Pentium chips which dominate entry-level computers, debuted on April 15 in computer systems under $1,300. IBM recently announced one of the first Celeron systems under $1,000.

Intel spokesperson, Seth Walker, told Newsbytes, "Our .25 micron technology is very successful, and we are getting better than expected production for the entire P6 line." The outcome is higher yields or more usable chips per silicon wafer, which in turn means Intel is able to put more Pentium II and Celeron microprocessors into the distribution channel at lower prices.

Ashok Kumar, an analyst at Piper Jaffray, was reported in a Dow Jones article saying June 7 as the date Intel is expected to drop prices on its 266 MHz and 300 MHz Pentium II chips by close to 20 percent. The faster 350 MHz and 400 MHz models will fall by 16 percent to 12 percent, respectively, according to Kumar. He also said Intel's 333 MHz Pentium II will remain unchanged in June, but drop by 16 percent in late July.

While higher yields result in lower computer prices, they can also quicken production of Intel's timetable to for newer products. Intel's Walker said the next generation of Celeron processors, now under the code-name Mendecino, will ship sooner than expected because of the better than expected production of current chips.

Mendecino will be the first Celeron to have an internal cache on the chip. When the 266 MHz model was introduced in April, critics complained the lack of cache would hamper the microprocessor's performance. Mendecino will ship with 128 kilobytes of internal cache. At this time, Intel will not reveal the speed at which Mendecino will run.

Originally, Mendecino was planned for shipment in the first half of 1999. A new timetable has the newest entry-level microprocessor shipping sometime during the fourth quarter of 1998.

If and when Intel announces Pentium II and Celeron reductions, competitive computer makers are expected to deliver the cuts to consumers within days. T.R. Reid, a spokesperson for Dell Computer, said, "In general, it is our policy to pass along these cuts as quickly as possible to our customers. Our entire business model is set-up to respond quickly to our customers need and to price reductions on components."

Local retailers in the Silicon Valley area offer some of the most competitive computer prices available. In San Francisco, Umiracle manager Diane Guo told Newsbytes, "We can respond in about a week or less after Intel announces a price reduction."

Currently, Intel's Pentium II 300 MHz microprocessor sells for $375 in lots of 1,000. A fifteen percent cut drops the price to $330 which would translate to a possible $40 to $45 cut in a 300 MHz Pentium II system. The less expensive Celeron microprocessors and slower Pentium IIs would show a smaller reduction in system pricing.

Reported by Newsbytes News Network: newsbytes.com



To: Mark Oliver who wrote (429)5/28/1998 3:08:00 PM
From: Mark Oliver  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2025
 
This is the new announcement from AMD. It fails to mention higher speed memory bus. Is that just to be assumed, or does Intel have an edge here?

Regards,

Mark

AMD Unveils Second-Generation K6 Processor

<Picture>****AMD Unveils Second-Generation K6 Processor 05/28/98 ATLANTA, GEORGIA, U.S.A., 1998 MAY 28 (NB) -- By Craig Menefee, Newsbytes. Advanced Micro Devices [NYSE:AMD] is introducing its second- generation K6 processor, the K6-2, today at the Electronic Entertainment Exposition (E3) in Atlanta. The multimedia-enhanced chip features more than 20 new instructions, a collection dubbed "3DNow" by AMD.

The 333 megahertz (MHz) version will debut for $369 in 1000 unit quantities to PC makers, a very good price point for a chip that AMD claims performs cycle-for-cycle like an Intel Pentium II. AMD spokesperson Dale Weisman says consumers will find 333 MHz K6-2 machines on retail shelves for under $1,000 by Christmas.

The chip is available now in 333, 300 and 266 megahertz (MHz) clock rates, with a 400 MHz chip planned in the second half of 1998, according to Weisman, who spoke with Newsbytes Wednesday night from his hotel room in Atlanta.

Like all AMD central processing units (CPUs) now current, the K6-2 processor uses 0.25-micron features on a Socket 7-based design, Weisman said. The shrink to 0.25 microns let the Sunnyvale, Calif. firm cram 9.3 million transistors onto an 81 millimeter (mm) square K6- 2 die. Weisman said another shrink, to 0.18 micron features, is now in the works and will further increase chip speed and feature densities by the end of 1999, around the time a third generation AMD-K7 processor is planned.

By comparison, the original AMD-K6 CPU, made with 0.35-micron features, held only 8.8 million transistors on a wafer which, at 162 mm, was twice as large.

The K6-2 comes out of the gate with considerable support from the industry, starting with Microsoft, which will build K6-2 instructions into its DirectX application programming interface (API). Such APIs are the interface between hardware and software applications on Windows machines, and so are crucial to bringing the new chip's capabilities from the hardware to the user.

The 3DNow instructions have not been included in the initial release of Windows 98, but Weisman said they will be downloadable from Microsoft on the Internet as DirectX 6.0, planned for release in July.

The K6-2 chip's new capabilities are based on more than 20 new 3DNow instructions that eliminate what Weisman called "a crucial bottleneck" in the graphics pipeline between floating point calculations and the integer-intensive setup and rendering done by graphics accelerator cards. The result, Weisman told Newsbytes, is that K6-2 systems "just crank out the graphics" and "now can keep pace with most advanced rendering cards, and won't keep the fastest accelerator cards waiting."

Analysts said Intel probably won't deliver comparable speeds until next year, in a chip now code-named Katmai. As one result, PC makers including IBM, Fujistu, and CTX will use the new chip in machines planned to go on sale shortly.

Other firms that have announced support at the E3 show include sound chip maker Aureal Semiconductor, PC core logic vendor Via Technologies and 3D digital content publisher Viewpoint DataLabs International. NTT Soft, a subsidiary of Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corporation, will support the K6-2 through its InterSpace virtual reality platform.

"This part will deliver performance on mainstream business applications, as measured by the Winstone 98 benchmark that are clock-for-clock equal to the P-II," said Weisman. "It's well positioned against (Intel) P-II, and it's at least 25% less in unit cost. It will enable system price points significantly less than the P-II."

He added, "The end users are going to see more lifelike graphics, you'll have big-screen sounds and video effects, and also an enhanced Internet experience."

Weisman said E3 was a "natural choice" for introducing the chip, since the games vendors have traditionally been first to make use of new graphics and, increasingly, new sound capabilities.

However, he added, "There'll be other applications soon that are non-gaming and will have a real impact on productivity. For example, LiveArt 98 by ViewPoint Data Labs is already available. When you look at it, anything based on Open GL will benefit from this processor."

Reported by Newsbytes News Network: newsbytes.com .