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To: Process Boy who wrote (80627)5/8/1999 6:58:00 PM
From: Amy J  Respond to of 186894
 
Hi Process Boy, this was posted on the thread earlier... I wonder what the outcome was? Sometimes it appears, when a company indicates they are "in talks with Intel" but an article does not contain a quote from an Intel representative, there's a pattern where nothing happens, although that's not always the case.

Unrelated, the part I found interesting was, "The chip sets to be developed would be integrated into the PC and driven by the system's microprocessor, thereby eliminating the need for a stand-alone modem."

Amy J

Intel Might Co-Develop Host-Based Cable-Modem ICs
(02/19/99, 12:53 p.m. ET)
By Mark LaPedus, Electronic Buyers' News

techweb.com

Continuing its quest to integrate broadband communications
in the PC architecture, Intel is in talks with Libit
Signal Processing about co-developing a line of host-based
cable-modem chip sets.

The chip sets to be developed would be integrated into the
PC and driven by the system's microprocessor, thereby
eliminating the need for a stand-alone modem. Current
stand-alone cable modems include an internal processor to
boost performance, namely a RISC chip from Hitachi, IBM's
microelectronics division, or another supplier.

"We're interested in promoting the concept of host-based
cable modems," said Jacob Tanz, vice president of
worldwide sales at Herzlia, Israel-based Libit, a supplier
of cable-modem chip sets. Libit's U.S. office is located
in Los Altos, Calif.

Tanz confirmed Libit is talking to Intel, but declined to
elaborate on future product plans. "We are in discussions
with Intel," he said. "It's also in Intel's interest to
address this technology, as well."

Intel is pushing the market toward software-driven cable
modems as well as analog modems and xDSL technologies as a
means to sell more high-end microprocessors, analysts
said.

Last October, Intel invested in a Santa Clara,
Calif.-based xDSL chip start-up called Integrated Telecom
Express, which is selling a software-driven xDSL solution
to OEMs.

Now, Intel apparently has selected Libit as its
cable-modem partner, which poses a threat to the world's
leading supplier of cable-modem chip sets -- Broadcom.

"Libit was the first vendor to announce a DOCSIS-compliant
chip set, but they have since been snuffed out by
Broadcom," said Shannon Pleasant, an analyst at In-Stat,
in Scottsdale, Ariz. "This may be a way for Libit to get
their foot back in the door with cable-modem vendors."

Software-driven cable-modem and xDSL technologies,
however, are still in their infancy, Pleasant said. And
the DOCSIS standard has yet to be solidified, forcing OEMs
to ship proprietary cable-modem products.

Still, the stakes are high. The market is expected to grow
from 492,000 units shipped in 1998 to 2.4 million units by
2002, according to Dataquest, in San Jose, Calif.