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To: exhon2004 who wrote (68826)11/19/1998 10:13:00 PM
From: Paul Engel  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 186894
 
Greg And Intel Investors - Intel's Product 1999 RoadMAP , Roll Out Schedules and Pricing are discussed in this article.

Note the following key Product Roll Out Dates:

Jan. 3 - 366 MHz Celeron plus Socket 370 ! (Yeah Sockets !)

Jan. 24 - Low Power Celerons for Low End Notebooks PLUS DIXONs (366 MHz Pentium IIs) for HIGH END Notebooks.

(Note to AMD's Sharpy - We Will Be Waiting !)

February 28 - Pentium II price cuts - "POSSIBLY" the Katmai Launch date.

April 11 - 400 MHz Celeron for Desktops Announcement + 333 MHz Mobile Celeron

Q1 sometime - TANNER with 2 Megabyte L2 Cache ! Maybe on the CPU chip?

Paul

{==============================================}
crw.com

Comdex News
Intel 1999: Celeron Hits 433MHz,
Consumer PCs Hit 600MHz

Mark Harrington
Las Vegas
11:54 AM EDT, Tues., Nov. 17, 1998

Intel will fortify positions in the low- and mid-range PC market next year by
increasing the speed of Celeron to 433MHz and upping the speed of
consumer desktops to 600MHz with a new 133MHz system bus, market
sources said.

Mixed into the early 1999 roadmap are steeper price cuts than previously
planned for Celeron and Pentium II microprocessors.

The 600MHz chip will be among the late arrivals in a new Intel roadmap that
includes Pentium II models with enhanced MMX instruction sets -- a class
of chips code-named Katmai. The 133MHz system bus enhancement, part
of an effort known as Coppermine, will make its debut in the second half of
next year, the sources said.

While Katmai-class processors, which include 70 new MMX-like
instructions, have been discussed for some time, Intel's strategy for the new
processor was made clear in meetings with OEMs and key partners late
last month. Systems with the new Katmai chips will be available in late
February or early March, when 450MHz and 500MHz versions make their
formal debuts at prices lower than previously expected -- to ensure quick
assimilation into the market.

While Intel executives declined to discuss specifics of the Katmai launch,
Paul Otellini, executive vice president and general manager of Intel's
architecture business group, indicated the processor will be heavily
marketed for its ability to facilitate Internet functionality. He said there will
be several times the amount of software for the processor at launch than
had been available for MMX.

While Intel won't discuss pricing, sources say the 450MHz will be
introduced at a $528 price in 1,000-unit quantities, and the 500MHz at $760.
Intel will launch a 533MHz Katmai at a $740 price later in the year, the
sources said, and speeds will reach 600MHz by year's end.

Efficiencies in production capabilities have allowed Intel to cut the price of
its standard Pentium II chips below previously indicated cuts, Intel told
partners. Accordingly, the Pentium II 450MHz, which dropped to around
$560 on Oct. 25, will drop on Feb. 28 to $475 instead of a previously
planned $520, sources said. (The 450MHz will drop to $395 on April 11, and
$302 shortly thereafter.)

Also in for a deeper cut than planned is the Pentium II 400, which dropped
on Oct. 25 to $375. On Jan. 3, it will be reduced to $353, then drop again on
Feb. 28 to $280 from a previously planned $315. On April 11, it drops again
to $245, then to $200 shortly thereafter.

The Pentium II 300MHz and 333MHz (currently at $205 and $180,
respectively), will hold their pricing into Q1, when they are expected to fade
from the scene.

Celeron processors will also get a big boost from Intel, starting late this
year, when the company implements a new cost-efficient method to mount
the chip on new motherboards in a 370-pin design called PPGA. The first of
those will be available late this year, for official introduction with the
imminent 366MHz Celeron on Jan. 3. Intel has lowered the introductory
price of that chip to around $160, from a previously planned $190. It will drop
to around $150 on April 11, when the 400MHz Celeron makes its
appearance on the roadmap, at a price of $180.

Also planned for steeper cuts on Jan. 3 are the Celeron 333MHz and the
Celeron 300, both of which sport 128KB of cache. From respective prices of
$160 and $140, the two will drop to around $120 and $90. (Previously
planned prices would have left the two at $150 and $105, respectively, on
Jan 3.)

While Intel said it plans to bring the Celeron to the mobile PC market, it will
do so in ways that accelerate acceptance of the chip, to make up for gains
by AMD and Cyrix at the low end, sources said.

On Jan. 24, Intel will unveil a strategy around three Celeron chips for mobile
users: the 300MHz, a standard 266MHz and a 233MHz. The chips will be
priced to OEMs at $185 (down from a previously planned $240), $106 (down
from a previously planned $153), and $100, respectively.

On or before April 11, Intel will introduce a fourth mobile Celeron, a 333MHz
version, at a planned $185 price point. It will also introduce a low-voltage
version of the 266MHz Celeron, priced at $135.

Other new chips in the mobile line, to be announced Jan. 24, include
Pentium IIs in 366MHz, 333MHz, 266MHz with low voltage, and a new
lower-than-planned price on the standard 266MHz (to $185, from a
previously planned $205).

Intel also plans to continue making standard Pentium-with-MMX chips for its
mobile line into January, carrying 300MHz, two 266MHz units, and a
233MHz model.

The Intel roadmap through Q1 is equally aggressive on the corporate side,
as Intel pushes the envelope with new processors, code-named Tanner, that
boast 2MB of cache, speeds of 500MHz, and prices from $930 to $3,690
(for the processor alone).

Pentium II Xeon processors will also stay in the game, with speeds from
400MHz to 450MHz and prices ranging from $820 to $3,690.

Got a news tip? Drop us a line.

More Headlines



To: exhon2004 who wrote (68826)11/20/1998 1:26:00 AM
From: carl a. mehr  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 186894
 
greg and All,
Just returned from COMDEX and I am counting "My Moe Money".

Getting hooked on more margin again, so I am sporting a YTD gain of 61%. You may remember "my Alamo" last year, so I am moving toward a 65/35 equity to loan ratio to play it safe. That is of course if I can control the temptation of buying Moe stocks. I am making up for a lousy 6% loss last year, so game plan is back on track. Greed is good, and win we must to make it fun!

The keynote address by Intel was a total disaster, and Intel PR people and the Intel Board of Directors should look at the tape and learn something. Intel missed a golden opportunity and disappointed 90% of the people in attendance. I do not blame President and CEO Craig Barrett for the shameful performance. He tried to elevate the discussions to a higher level, but not with much success. Intel was caught in a bad situation. David Hakala in the attached write-up cleaned up the version of what was said by omitting “ many, many dirty words, as bad as they get!”

The rotten low down dirty language that took place belonged at a nightclub and no place else. Intel owes all attendees a public apology!


daily.zdevents.com
"Technically Incorrect" goes over the top
By David Hakala, The Daily
There's never been a keynote presentation like the one hosted by Intel President and CEO Craig Barrett on Tuesday afternoon. But there should be!

Bill Maher, acerbic curmudgeon and star of the TV talk show Politically Incorrect, opened Barrett's satire of his satire with a note on the geekhood of COMDEX attendees. "You people are this town's worst nightmare: guys who don't like girls and understand math."
It got worse – and funnier – from there. In addition to Barrett and Maher, panelists included Bill Nye ("The Science Guy"), leading IT industry pundit Esther Dyson, and science writer/comedian Penn Jillette of Penn & Teller, who delighted in bullying the other boys to "shut up and let Esther get a word in edgewise!"
The repartee skipped across many topics. Maher suggested that Intel has an "upgrade agenda" to build quickly obsolete computers. Barrett replied, "That (opinion) is kinda typical of middle-aged Americans. But 70 percent of homes with kids have computers."
"Yeah, white kids," retorted Maher, shifting discussion to the so-called Digital Divide between computer haves and have-nots. Nye avowed that computers will get "so cheap so fast you won't be able to avoid owning one if you buy a toaster." Dyson noted that low-income families are buying PCs at a faster rate than more affluent families, "because they see (technological literacy) as their best way out" of the trap of poverty.
Dyson focused on another gap in the Information Economy: "only four percent of Silicon Valley executives are women."
"So what if women just don't want to do computers," argued Maher. Nye argued that "technology made by people, and if it's not made by all kinds of people then it's not as good as it could be. I'm a geek, but we don't want to trust geeks to run society."
Inevitably, the topic turned to what drives the IT revolution. Jillette noted that "you gotta have sex and shopping early on in any technology or it's not going to take off." Maher, ever the killjoy, replied, "I had sex on a computer once, and I was sore for a week!"
But Dyson got in the last and arguably the best zinger. When Maher complained about the computer-controlled windows on his car sticking, Esther noted that "we also have computers whose Windows stick!"
$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$

The Humble One sez: I am not a prude. I have been to nightclubs all over the world, but the setting for this kind of filth was totally wrong: We were stone sober! To “swallow” this smut a three drink minimum was definitely needed.
Piously smut-free humble carl

PS: What happened to the catalogs by Victoria's Secret? I am no longer getting my copy.