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To: Paul Engel who wrote (65104)9/18/1998 7:29:00 PM
From: Paul Engel  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 186894
 
Intel Investors - More Details on Intel's Mobile Pentium II Packaging Options and Die options, cache options, etc.

Note that the term "Dixon" is used twice - the first time INCORRECTLY.

Intel will offer a (MENDOCINO) Celeron with 128K L2 Cache and 233 MHz speed for low end BASIC notebook PCS - around $1500 in price. These will be branded as Celerons

The DIXON - a Pentium II with 256K L2 cache - will also be offered but under the Pentium II brand name. Obviously, these will be targeted at the higher end, higher performance end of the spectrum.

Intel will be offering these chips in up to FIVE packaging options, to fit different customer options as to cost, space, interchangeability, etc.

Other chips are discussed as well, including the new BANNISTER chip set.

Note - the article mentions a big push by AMD starting next week to attract more notebook PC business.

Too bad AMD's chips run at 2.2 volts instead of Intel's 1.6 to 1.7 volts - for LOWER POWER.

Paul

{==================================}
ebnews.com

Latest CPU Packaging For Intel's
Mobile Chips Blends Form With
Function

(3:15 p.m. EDT, 9/18/98)

By Mark Hachman And Sandy Chen

Intel Mobile MPU Price Update Chart

Component purchasers hoping to infuse their notebook PC lines
with a new look can turn to Intel Corp.'s latest mobile processor
roadmap for help.

With form factor as a new and important consideration in the
notebook space, Intel has increased the number of processor
package options available to its customers. The expanded menu,
which EBN obtained from OEM sources, will allow designers, in
turn, to modify their laptop PC models to suit an array of end-user
tastes.

In short, while price and performance contribute to the desirability
of a notebook PC, looks count too, according to Jason Ziller,
platform marketing manager in Intel's Mobile and Handheld
Products Group, Santa Clara, Calif.

"You're used to price on one axis, and performance on another,"
Ziller said. "Think of the form factor as a new, third axis."

Ziller declined to comment on specific features of Intel's mobile
CPU roadmap, and in the desktop arena the company will remain
committed to a price/performance segmentation strategy. But in
the notebook market, Intel's upcoming processors will fit a range of
system sizes.

The strategy may also help Intel stave off competition from
Advanced Micro Devices, which is said to be mounting a
mobile-processor campaign of its own to be announced later this
week.

In addition, the multitude of packaging options should allow OEMs
to more easily replace a processor during assembly, and to
address different mobile configurations, such as the "slimline,"
"thin-and-light," and "mini-notebook" form factors, said Dean
McCarron, an analyst at Mercury Research, Scottsdale, Ariz.

To help it pinpoint various mobile-market strata, Intel has broken
the notebook arena into several segments, ranging from the
$1,500 Basic system to Professional-class devices costing about
$3,500.

Aimed at the low-end of the market, Intel's forthcoming 233-MHz
Dixon microprocessor will include 128 Kbytes of integrated level 2
cache and will be marketed under the Celeron name. But the part
will only be made available in a BGA package addressed
specifically to the mini-notebook market segment, according to
Intel's confidential roadmap.

On the other hand, the mainstream Dixon processor, with 256
Kbytes of cache, will be sold under the Pentium II brand name in
five package types beginning in the first quarter of 1999: a BGA; a
mini-cartridge; two versions of Intel's MMC (mobile-module
connector) package; and a new micro- pin-grid array (microPGA)
package, to be added in the second quarter of 1999.

At its most basic level, Intel offers the option of either a packaged
processor or an MMC that includes the north bridge of the core
logic. The MMC-and another MMC packaging version of that
includes an AGP interface-will continue to be offered throughout
1999.

"The packaging options just allow [customers] to have the option
of, say, choosing the mini-cartridge with discrete level 2
cache-but to do so at the last minute," said Peter N. Glaskowsky,
analyst at MicroDesign Resources, Sunnyvale, Calif.

In the second half of 1999, Intel will move cache memory for its
mobile processor lines entirely on-chip with the introduction of its
400- and 500-MHz Coppermine devices, which incorporate 256
Kbytes of integrated cache. Speaking at last week's Intel
Developers' Forum here, Intel president and chief executive Craig
Barrett added that the company's Cascades processor, which with
the Coppermine will be manufactured on a 0.18-micron process,
will also integrate cache directly onto the die.

By combining the cache and processor in a single package, the
variety of packaging options should begin to coalesce into fewer
choices as OEM demand for continued integration continues,
according to McCarron.

"Everybody will go to the PGA in the future," McCarron said. "The
market strongly prefers a small, socketable package."

The only announced changes to Intel's roadmap are that the
launches of the 366-MHz Pentium II and 300-MHz Celeron
processors have been accelerated to the first quarter of 1999. The
366-MHz Pentium II-which will ship in BGA, mini-cartridge, and
both MMC-package versions-is aimed at a 9.5-W thermal
budget at 1.6 V. The processors will be paired with the Banister
chipset.



To: Paul Engel who wrote (65104)9/19/1998 9:05:00 AM
From: Road Walker  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
Paul, re: Hatch/Intel/Microsoft

Thanks for the revealing post! Someone should post a link from your post to the MSFT thread, maybe Gates would get a copy and realize that to avoid anti-trust enforcement all you just need is to open a facility in the state of Judiciary Committee Chairman.

Mr. Hatch represents politics at it's worst, and that's a very hard thing to say these days. Thanks for being alert to the 2 *unrelated* stories...

John



To: Paul Engel who wrote (65104)9/19/1998 10:57:00 AM
From: Scumbria  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 186894
 
Politics in its finest form !

Paul,

Maybe Clinton will open a military base in Utah.

Scumbria




To: Paul Engel who wrote (65104)9/21/1998 6:27:00 PM
From: Badger  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
Utah knows what's good for it. It took the state Industrial Assistance Fund (IAF) less than 24 hours to approve a $5 million grant to Intel to build the site here. One board member called it 'a complete no-brainer.'

Intel bought an option on 140 acres several months ago, and everything I've heard about it since has been very positive. In fact, talk around here was that we wouldn't be moving until early 2000, but an article in the SL Tribune the other day quoted an Intel spokesperson as saying the first building "should be done in mid-1999." Apparently, the plan is to build at least three buildings to start out with and top out at eight.

Cool. It'd be nice to have a cafeteria. We're in leased buildings right now.

Andy (That's 'Mr. Grove' to the rest of you. We're all on a first-name basis here :) ) is visiting Utah on Oct. 14. Maybe he's just stopping by to say 'hi', but I'm guessin' it would be a great opportunity to announce the new Intel site in Riverton.

Newspaper speculation on why the state would give Intel $5 million was that Intel will bring 5,000 - 8,000 jobs to Utah in the next 20 years, that according to some government report. BTW the state is already committed to giving $2.8 million to Micron once they open their finished (but currently mothballed) fab in Lehi.

My opinion (no insider info here, I'm just a grunt) is that it's a done deal except for a few signatures and they'll break ground in a few months. That'd be great. Knock 20 minutes off my daily commute.

Happy hunting!

Badger