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To: Timothy Liu who wrote (64801)9/15/1998 5:18:00 PM
From: Tony Viola  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 186894
 
Tim, all, blue plastic computer with Katmai inside, and iMac knock-off with Celeron inside...what's the world coming to?

news.com

Intel unveils blue
plastic computer
By Michael Kanellos
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
September 15, 1998, 1:15 p.m. PT

PALM SPRINGS, California--Intel is
showing off a new home entertainment
device at the Intel Developer Forum
here.

Intel and a Korean manufacturer are
touting new, stylized computers for the
future that borrow heavily from the
iMac design introduced by Apple
earlier this year.

Both are modular,
and both are blue.

At the forum, CEO
Craig Barrett
showed off a
prototype of the
type of a home
computer/information
appliance that
should start to
appear in 2001.

The machine, shaped like a Mayan
pyramid, featured a 500-MHz Katmai
processor--a processor slated to come
out next year--128MB of memory, four
USB (universal serial bus) ports, and
two 1394 ports. The latter connection
technology is targeted at data-intensive
devices such as digital camcorders,
while USB is aimed at more standard
peripheral devices such as keyboards
and scanners.

Rather than come to a point like other
pyramids, however, the top was
blunted by a DVD player. Although
technologically intriguing, one of the
key features of the machine was its
blue color. All four sleek sides of the
machine were made from translucent
blue plastic.

Customers, Barrett said, are looking
for "different form factors and absolute
simplicity of design."

On the other side of the world, Korean
manufacturer Trigem has created a
joint venture with a Korean display
manufacturer that is working on an
iMac knock-off, according to sources.
The new venture, called E-Machines,
has already hired an industrial
designer to develop a lookalike to the
iMac.

But, instead of a Power Processor, the
machine will use a 333-MHz Celeron,
said Ashok Kumar, semiconductor
analyst with Piper Jaffray.

"This is going to cause significant
price pain," he said.

(Intel is an investor in CNET: The
Computer Network.)