SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : Intel Corporation (INTC) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Tony Viola who wrote (74424)2/24/1999 7:53:00 PM
From: puborectalis  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 186894
 
A service of Semiconductor Business News, CMP Media Inc.
Story posted 4:30 p.m. EST/1:30 p.m. PST, 2/24/99

Intel to delay Direct RDRAM chip set until
third quarter

By Andrew MacLellan
Electronic Buyers' News

PALM SPRINGS, Calif. -- Confirming earlier published reports, Intel
Corp. said today it will delay until the second half of 1999 the introduction
of a chip set designed to support emerging Direct Rambus DRAM.

The Camino chip set, known formally as the Intel 820, was scheduled to roll
out in June but instead will be pushed back until late in the third quarter,
executives confirmed here at this week's Intel Developers' Forum (IDF).

Intel said the delay of the Rambus memory-interface platform sprang from a
complex combination of factors relating to the availability of the chip set,
clock ICs, PC boards, and memory devices. However, the company
reiterated its pledge to help customers roll out Rambus-enabled PCs this
year.

"We're still going to deliver in '99," said an Intel spokesman. "[But] there are
several parts that all need to come together in parallel for the effort to get
there, and a couple of the parts still need work."

Daniel T. Niles, an analyst at BancBoston Robertson Stephens, upgraded
Rambus stock from a long-term attractive rating to a buy on the expectation
that Intel would provide a more detailed schedule for the Camino release at
the IDF.

"We knew that the Intel roadmap was going to slip," said Niles, noting that
he cut his stock price estimate on Rambus Inc. several months ago in
anticipation of Intel's missing its target date. "We always knew that people
would have to go to Rambus, or the Intel microprocessor would be choked.
The question was how long it would take to get there. Whatever Intel sticks
in the ground today will be a new, realistic deadline."

Rambus chips are the cornerstone of a high-speed PC main memory
subsystem that Intel is banking will narrow the widening gap between
processor and memory performance. The Direct RDRAM interface is
capable of clock speeds reaching 800 megahertz and has a bandwidth of
1.6 gigabytes per second.

In fact, Intel has linked its new Pentium III processor family to Rambus
technology by ensuring that the processor's accompanying chipset--the Intel
820--will work with Direct RDRAM memory. Without the Intel 820, new
Pentium III devices still will operate with the existing 440BX chip set and
standard PC100 memory, according to Peter D. MacWilliams, an Intel
fellow and director of platform architecture at Intel's Desktop Products
Group in Hillsboro, Ore.

While Intel has been actively promoting Rambus, memory-chip and module
makers have reported trouble getting initial Rambus costs down because of
expensive new packaging and test technology. A recent report from
Hyundai Electronics America, a San Jose-based DRAM manufacturer,
indicated that 128-megabit Direct RDRAM could, at the end of 1999, still
cost 40% more than SDRAM chips currently in use.

With the Intel 820 delay, DRAM suppliers have been granted several
months to improve their yields--a situation that may not please those
vendors hoping to cash in by beating their competitors to market. And
analysts warned that, given too much time, chip makers may be ready with
volume production of Rambus parts before a market for them has appeared.

In such a case, Intel could benefit in some ways from its own delay by
ensuring that an early oversupply of Rambus chips lowers costs for its
customers. But it could prove to be a double-edged sword, according to
Jim Handy, an analyst at Dataquest Inc., San Jose.

"It's a mixed bag for Intel," Handy said. "For every quarter they delay, they
lose some of their competitive speed advantage. How much of a speed
advantage are they willing to give away to gain a larger dollar percentage of
the PC? It's like giving away market share for profitability."

Earlier reports had indicated that Intel would introduce an interim chip set
that supported 600-MHz Direct RDRAM until the Intel 820 could be rolled
out. Intel executives at IDF said that while the Camino device will support
both clock rates, they will be introduced simultaneously in the third quarter.
--Jennifer Baljko contributed to this report


All material on this site Copyright © 1998 CMP Media Inc. All rights reserved.

Stories in Feb. 15
SBN publication
Intel could jump-start
300-mm
Korea makes
surprising turnaround
New wave of metrology
tools hits fabs



Links to past
SBN publications


For information about
equipment, products, materials,
and services for semiconductor
manufacturing, click here to go
to SuperSite/Semiconductor.


Search EDTN and selected
industry sites; for SBN-only
search, see left-hand column.







To: Tony Viola who wrote (74424)2/24/1999 7:55:00 PM
From: Diamond Jim  Respond to of 186894
 
"Quote.com"
-
Tony, thanks and yes I do have it bookmarked. I guess I was hoping it was wrong<g>.

jim



To: Tony Viola who wrote (74424)2/24/1999 8:09:00 PM
From: Gerald Walls  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
Jim, LU looked about the same. Do you have Quote.com bookmarked?

This service only works on NASDAQ stocks after hours (Form-T's).



To: Tony Viola who wrote (74424)2/24/1999 10:12:00 PM
From: Jeff Fox  Respond to of 186894
 
Tony, re:Quote.com Try this URL and save a few keystrokes...

quote.com

The number is your desired time scale. It is set for 10 minute ticks above.

Jeff



To: Tony Viola who wrote (74424)2/25/1999 1:37:00 PM
From: Jeff Fox  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
Tony,All, re:Quote.com - cure for the recent window shrinkage...

I noticed lately that Quote.com is screwing around with their service in order to cram in more advertising. Try the following URL, which seems to still give a full sized applet window.

quote.com

Jeff