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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Maxwell who wrote (37269)9/22/1998 1:38:00 AM
From: Maxwell  Respond to of 1583494
 
What Game Developers Think of KNI?

195.92.18.115

"At last week's developer forum, Intel admitted there were very few
games developers present.

AMD North European director, Richard Baker, said: "I suspect they
[the games developers] are working so hard on the 3Dnow!
Platform that they did not have the time to go."

Maxwell



To: Maxwell who wrote (37269)9/22/1998 7:54:00 AM
From: Ed Sammons  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1583494
 
Maxwell,

I think the Jetta portables use the regularly packeaged K6-2. The portable packaged K6-2 300s were just announced. BTW, great price.

biz.yahoo.com

Tuesday September 22, 4:47 am Eastern Time

Advanced Micro to unveil new chip - WSJ

NEW YORK, Sept 22 (Reuters) - Advanced Micro Devices Inc. has
developed a chip that could help drive down prices for portable
computers, offering comparable performance to archrival Intel Corp. (Nasdaq:INTC - news) for
about one-third the price, the Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday.

AMD, based in Sunnyvale, Calif., Tuesday will announce that it is shipping a microprocessor for
laptop machines that operates at 300 megahertz, the same speed offered by Intel's fastest chip for
the portable market, the report said.

AMD said customers for the new product include Compaq Computer Corp. (NYSE:CPQ - news),
the No. 1 personal-computer maker, and other manufacturers that it isn't yet identifying, the
report said.

David Summer, director of product marketing, said the new K6-300 will sell for $229, compared
with $637 for Intel's 300-megahertz Pentium II, the Journal reported.

Where computers based on those Intel chips sell for more than $3,000, AMD estimated that
K6-based portable computers will sell for $1,999 to $2,499 this fall, the report said.



To: Maxwell who wrote (37269)9/22/1998 12:23:00 PM
From: Jim McMannis  Respond to of 1583494
 
Max,
That K6-2-333 sure does make a great notebook chip doesn't it.
Jim