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Politics : Formerly About Applied Materials -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Proud_Infidel who wrote (20663)6/22/1998 9:13:00 PM
From: Justa Werkenstiff  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 70976
 
Brian and All: ETEC steps up to the plate and declares its shares undervalued and authorizes repurchase of $30m:

biz.yahoo.com



To: Proud_Infidel who wrote (20663)6/22/1998 9:31:00 PM
From: Gottfried  Respond to of 70976
 
Brian, I read the story about the delay. It's 6-8 weeks; not
unusual in the tech area. Meanwhile Intel can sell more of the
older chips left on the shelves. Story below...

GM

By Lisa DiCarlo, PC Week Online
June 22, 1998 2:43 PM PT

Intel Corp. has discovered an errata in the 450NX chip set that will delay the chip set's release by six to eight weeks.

As a result, the release of many Pentium II Xeon servers will be delayed until late this summer.

The 450NX chip set was originally expected to be released next week, along with the Pentium II Xeon processor line. Intel began notifying OEMs of the errata, or bug, late last week, sources said.

The 450NX, designed for use in PC servers, will provide such capabilities as four-processor and higher multiprocessing, support for up to 8GB of RAM, intelligent I/O and multiple PCI channels
for Xeon-based servers, sources said.

As a result of the bug, however, server makers and users will be limited to dual-processor Pentium II servers for a while longer. Some server makers have already scaled Pentium II systems beyond two processors, but those systems are based on more expensive, proprietary solutions.

Although Intel spends millions of dollars a year in processor testing and verification, errata are very common in semiconductors as complex as microprocessors. In fact, there is almost no way to avoid errata, regardless of the quality, money and time spent on prerelease testing and verification, according to Intel.

Intel officials, in Santa Clara, Calif., declined to comment on the errata or unannounced products in general. The company, however, acknowledged that many OEMs will announce broad support for Xeon-based servers next week and that these servers would be released over
the course of the summer.