Sunday, May 31, 2009

The Intel PRO/Wireless WI-Fi

The Intel PRO/Wireless network connection is a Wi-Fi CERTIFIED*^ product. Intel® PRO/Wireless 2915ABG Network Connection and Intel® PRO/Wireless 2200BG Network Connection are FIPS validated with the 3eTI supplicant enabled solution.

Wi-Fi certified product Wi-Fi certified product
FIPS 140-2 Inside

TM A Certification Mark of NIST, which does not imply product endorsement by NIST, the U.S. or Canadian Governments.

+
Wireless connectivity and some features may require you to purchase additional software, services or external hardware. Availability of public wireless LAN access points is limited, wireless functionality may vary by country and some hotspots may not support Linux-based Intel Centrino processor technology systems. System performance measured by MobileMark*. System performance, battery life, wireless performance and functionality will vary depending on your specific operating system, hardware and software configurations.

^ Wireless functionality may vary by country and Wi-Fi certification is not supported on Linux*-based Intel® Centrino® processor technology laptops. Check with your PC manufacturer for details. Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of their respective owners.

Intel® PROSet/Wireless Software v10.5 supports PCS and Intel Centrino processor technology based notebooks with Intel® PRO/Wireless 3945ABG Network Connection, Intel® PRO/Wireless 2200BG Network Connection and Intel® PRO/Wireless 2915ABG Network Connection. The software may not be supported by your PC's operating system and/or by your PC manufacturer. Some features may require specific hardware configurations. Check with your PC manufacturer for details.

§ Some security solutions may not be supported by your PC's operating system and may require additional software and/or certain hardware as well as wireless LAN infrastructure support. Check with your PC manufacturer for details.

Saturday, May 30, 2009

Wireless Networking

Intel® wireless networking solutions enable network connectivity without wires for notebook PC platforms. Intel products provide uncompromising performance, enhanced security and scalability for fast, flexible connectivity at work, at home, or on the road.

Friday, May 29, 2009

Intel Centrino 2 Processor Technology

With new laptop PCs based on Intel® Centrino® 2 processor technology for the home, or Intel® Centrino® 2 with vPro™ technology for business, you'll experience a new breakthrough in mobile performance, enabled longer battery life, the future of wireless now with 802.11n standard, and more, right at your fingertips.‡ Delivering performance gains of up to 50%¹ enabled by a minimum 3MB Smart Cache and 1066MHz Front Side Bus, these laptops are equipped to handle everything from robust business to masterful multimedia and everything in between. And with Intel Centrino 2 processor technology, you'll make quick work of the toughest computing tasks like HD video encoding—up to 90% faster², so you can accomplish more without the wait.

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Intel PRO/Wireless Network Connection

Intel® PRO/Wireless Network Connection The Intel® PRO/Wireless Network Connection is the integrated Wireless LAN (WLAN) solution for Intel® Centrino® processor technology and desktop personal computers. The Intel PRO/Wireless Network Connection provides freedom and flexibility to work and play without hunting for a phone jack, network cable, or plugging in a special card. Get connected through wireless LAN networks in your home, in the office, and in wireless LAN hotspots in airports, hotels and coffee shops. +
Deploying WLAN technology in your home and business increases productivity, efficiency and flexibility by enabling faster decision making, reducing down-time, and enhancing employee satisfaction. For more information visit our WLAN ROI and WLAN Deployment web pages.

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Intel 855PM Chipset

The Intel® 855 chipset family is part of Intel® Centrino® processor technology and is designed to deliver breakthrough performance at lower power. The Intel® 855PM chipset memory controller hub (MCH-M) is a mobile chipset solution that has been optimized to support the Intel® Pentium® M processor, high speed DDR memory and a hub interface to ICH4-M. This chipset has an AGP 4X interface and provides flexible support for high performance discrete graphics solutions.


Features and benefits

400 MHz low power processor system bus Supports 400 MHz system bus for single processor configurations.
Support for up to 2 GB of DDR 333/266/200 memory technology Higher performance & flexibility.
Integrated high-speed USB 2.0 Support for USB 2.0 peripherals for 40X faster data transfer rate and backward compatible to support USB 1.0 devices.
AGP4X interface High-bandwidth interface to provide flexible support for high performance mobile discrete graphics solutions.
Intel® Stable Image technology Enables chipset HW changes, minimizing impact to IT SW image stability.
Dynamic input/output buffer disabling for processor system bus & memory Reduces chipset power consumption by Intelligent activation or power-down of the processor system bus or memory.

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Mobile Intel 915PM Express Chipset

The Mobile Intel® 915PM Express chipset is a component of the Intel® Centrino® processor technology. It offers support for Intel® High Definition Audio which is a new enhanced audio specification for high quality audio enabling a premium home theater experience.

Mobile Intel® 915PM Express Chipset

The Mobile Intel® 915PM Express chipset also supports up to 2 GB of DDR2 system memory which enables up to 60% increase in peak memory bandwidth and power benefits over DDR memory. Additionally Mobile Intel® 915PM Express chipset supports PCI Express* bus architecture, a highly scalable general purpose I/O for the latest industry peripherals like ExpressCard*.

Features And Benefits

533 MHz Front Side Bus Up to 33% increase in Front Side Bus bandwidth over the previous generation.
Support for dual channel DDR2 400/533 MHz memory technology Up to 60% improvement in peak memory bandwidth and average power savings over DDR memory.
Discrete Graphics Supports a high speed PCI Express* graphics interface for the most demanding gaming and workstation applications.
Intel® Stable Image Technology Supports a unified graphics driver. Enables hardware changes without impact to IT software image stability.
Serial ATA Provides up to 150 MB/sec transfer rate for disk traffic.
Direct Media Interface (DMI) With up to 2 GB/sec concurrent bandwidth, DMI provides up to 4x faster I/O bandwidth compared to previous Intel proprietary Hub link I/O interface.
Integrated high speed USB 2.0 Support for eight USB 2.0 peripherals for maximum 40x faster data transfer and backward compatible to support USB 1.1 devices.
Intel® High Definition Audio (Intel® HD Audio) New audio specification enables increased bandwidth for high quality audio and support for Dolby* Technologies. Also enables power savings during audio activity.
PCI Express* Bus Architecture Enables the next generation of discrete graphics and I/O. Delivers up to a 4 times increase in discrete graphics bandwidth and 2 times the I/O bandwidth. Also supports the latest industry peripherals like ExpressCard*. Low pin count offers maximum bandwidth per pin.

Monday, May 25, 2009

Intel Core i7 965 Quad Core Processor

Winner of: Best Intel Processor for Performance

Why it's best: The ultimate Intel CPU, the Core i7 965 is factory-clocked at a blazing 3.20GHz. The Extreme’s main appeal over the lesser-tiered i7 940s and 920s is that it features unlocked multipliers for great overclocking performance. Intel’s new Nehalem architecture also radically re-thinks Intel’s past – and successful – Core 2 and Penryn chips by integrating an on-die memory controller, elimination of the aged front side bus which interestingly makes an i7 more akin to an AMD chip in many ways. The i7 also sports the return of Hyper Threading, which allows the quad-core chip to display eight logical cores for ultimate multitasking power. For those with extreme computers – and extreme budgets, the Core i7 965 Extreme should be on the top of your list.

Manufacturer Description: The Intel Core i7 processor features a 4-core, 8 software thread design with Intel Hyper-Threading Technology. Combined with Intel Turbo Boost technology, which accelerates the processor to match your workload, you'll get incredible performance no matter what your computing needs.

Best Intel Processor For Performance

When it comes to system and gaming performance, Intel has a solid lead over AMD. The new Nehalem (Core-i7) processors are currently the fastest desktop performers on the market. They’re also fairly priced, though you’ll need to invest in DDR3 memory and a motherboard that supports the new CPU socket. If you’re looking for the most performance out of your desktop computer, these are the best CPUs money can buy.

AMD Gains Processor Market Share on Intel

After five quarters of declining market share, Advanced Micro Devices gained ground in chip shipments over chief rival Intel during the first quarter of 2009, IDC said on Tuesday.

AMD saw its market share in processor shipments reach 22.3 percent during the first quarter of 2009, gaining 4.6 percent of the market compared with the fourth quarter of 2008. Intel lost 4.7 percent of the total market to reach a 77.3 percent share, IDC said in a survey.

AMD saw its market share increase because of a pricing advantage over Intel and a strong increase in desktop shipments, said Shane Rau, research director at IDC. Sequentially, AMD chip shipments increased 13 percent while Intel's shipments declined 16 percent.

Intel's sequential decline was partly due to suppliers holding back on purchases as they tried to clear up excess inventory of mobile processors, especially Atom processors for netbooks. Shipments of Atom processors recorded a sequential decline of 33 percent in the first quarter of 2009.

AMD has been restructuring its operations in an effort to reach profitability after more than two fiscal years of losses. The company last week merged its graphics and chip operations. Before that, it spun off its manufacturing assets to GlobalFoundries in order to cut manufacturing costs and focus on chip design.

AMD saw its mobile-processor market share reach 15 percent, grabbing 4.7 percent more of the market, while Intel's share fell to 84.3 percent from 89.1 percent. AMD also gained 3.8 percent of the market for desktop chips to reach 29.8 percent. Intel gave up 3.9 percent of the desktop chip market.

However, AMD lost 1.2 percent of the server and workstation chip markets, while Intel picked up the same amount to reach 89.3 percent.

AMD's gains couldn't stop the overall decline in worldwide processor shipments. Shipments reached around 65 million during the first quarter, a 13 percent year-over-year decline and a 10.9 percent sequential drop.

Even though excess inventory of desktop and mobile chips has been cleared out, unit shipments may continue to decline as customers hold back on PC purchases during the recession, Rau said.

IDC is a division of International Data Group, the parent company of IDG News Service

CORE 2 DUO Intel Processors

Intel CORE 2 DUO are new generation completely redesigned in 65nm while the D series are updates of old generations and its 90nm. core 2 will make less heat which give a little advantage in performance already because of the 65nm. core 2 use less voltage which mean the quality of the circuit is better and make less heat. they incorporates more technologies like EIST and other good stuff i dont remember. core 2 integrated more cache in the cpu wich greatly improve ther performance.Intel Processor

core 2 E6600 and up are all better than the D series. dont look the speed in Ghz. its just misleading. the lower speed new generation design is more powerfull than the older one.
they just out perform anything at the moment (that includes the AMD AM2 Athlon64 and Athlon FX series)

If you are building a new computer. IF you have money take the core 2 extreme but E6600 and e6700 are already very good.
take a nvidia video card like 7600gt, or 7900gt, 7900gtx or 7950gt(x).

if you build a pc, use ASUS for best performance and reliability. They are the world leading software and hardware computer builders. Very enovative and design in each of their components compared to their competitors. For best performant and inovative motherborad look at the boards that are colored in black with either the latest nidivia or intel chipset. if you are a gamer i think you will take nvidia, but both are good. Those black boards offer the best features and new technologies like Dolby ditial HD audio, Hyperpath (increase memory efficiency), AI booster or AI gear (instantaneousy overclocking without restarting pc or going in the bios), etc. Asus give tones of free softwares which are expensive enough if you buy it yourself.

Intel Processor To announce Notebook

Intel revealed their plans for a traditional notebook, ultra-thin CULV based, and range to netbook partner-partner. According to some sources, the information is expressed on a number of the notebook.

Intel notebook platforms in the future, which is scheduled Calpella outstanding in the third quarter 2009 with the aim notebook-sized 14, 15.6, 17.1, and 18.4 inches with a price range in 1200 U.S. dollars to the top, or intended for high end market. Meanwhile, for the stock, Intel will also cut the price berplatform Montevina notebook.

According to sources, the notebook manufacturers such as Quanta Computer, Compal Electronics, Wistron, Pegatron Technology, Micro-Star International (MSI), Elitegroup Computer Systems (ECS), Mitac Technology and Clevo already started preparation for the mass production of notebook based on the Calpella third quarter. They also plan to launch more models in the first quarter 2010.

Intel will push the sale of ultra-thin notebook with a processor CULV using Montevina processors as the excellent product and the targeted price range 699 to 1100 U.S. dollars. Some of the traditional notebook that offers the performance and price ratio is good also offered.

Due to low demand, Intel is planning to spend the N280 and Atom chipsets for netbook and GN40 leave the market with only one option ie Atom N270 and 945GSE chipset, at least until September this year.

Combination Atom N270 processor and chipset 945GSE akan start out of the market in September and was replaced by Atom processor with the latest chipset and Pineview with the code name Tiger Point. This platform will target 10-inch netbook segment with a price range of 399 to 599 U.S. dollars.

Intel also designed 8.9-inch netbook sail along with several producers. With spesifikai Atom processor N270, 945GSE chipset, 512MB memory, and flash-based media store with a capacity of 8GB or 16GB. The device will run the operating system Moblin v2.

With the price of production, post-sales maintenance, component supply, transport and customs costs, the price of the netbook is estimated only about 256 U.S. dollars. However, this particular segment of Intel akan supervise strictly the amount of supply.

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Mobile Intel 945PM Express Chipset

TheMobile Intel® 945PM Express chipset supports Intel® Centrino® processor technology and Intel's newest generation Intel® Centrino® processor technology.

Mobile Intel® 945PM Express Chipset


The Mobile Intel® 945PM Express chipset delivers outstanding system performance through high-bandwidth interfaces such as dual-channel DDR2 memory, 667 MHz system bus, PCI Express* x16 graphics port and PCI Express x1 I/O ports, next generation Serial ATA and Hi-Speed USB 2.0 connectivity. Use of the Mobile Intel® 945PM Express chipset includes support for Intel® Active Management Technology, the next generation of remote client network management for business.

Features and benefits

667MHz Front Side Bus Supports Intel® Core™ Duo and Intel® Core™ Solo processors with up to 25% faster data transfer rate compared to the previous generation bus speed.
PCI Express* x16 Interface Delivers greater than 3.5 times the bandwidth over the traditional AGP interface and supports the latest high-performance graphics cards.
PCI Express x1 Interface Offers up to 3.5 times the bandwidth over traditional PCI architecture, delivering faster access to peripheral devices and networking.
Intel® High Definition Audio (Intel® HD Audio)1 Integrated audio support enables premium sound and delivers advanced features such as multiple audio streams and jack re-tasking. The Dolby* PC Entertainment Experience1 is available exclusively on systems with Intel High Definition Audio.
Intel® Matrix Storage Technology2 Enables enhanced performance, power management and data protection for the storage subsystem.
Dual-channel DDR2 667MHz Memory Support Up to 10.7GB/s of bandwith and up to 4GB memory addressability, for faster system responsiveness.
Integrated high speed USB 2.0 Support for 8 USB 2.0 peripherals for maximum 40x faster data transfer and backward compatible to support USB 1.1 devices.

Saturday, May 23, 2009

Mobile Intel PM965 Express Chipset

The Mobile Intel® PM965 Express Chipset provides Microsoft Windows Vista Premium* support with the highest level of Windows Aero* experience1;. It delivers outstanding system performance through high-bandwidth interfaces such as dual-channel DDR2 memory, 800/533 MHz system bus, PCI Express* x16 graphics port and PCI Express x1 I/O ports, Serial ATA, and Hi-Speed USB 2.0 connectivity. Use of the Mobile Intel PM965 Express Chipset includes support for Intel® Active Management Technology (Intel® AMT) 2.5, the next generation of remote client network management for business.

Features And Benefits

Vista Premium support Enables Vista Premium logo with the highest level of Aero experience.
800 MHz Front Side Bus support Provides up to 20 percent faster data transfer rate compared to the previous generation bus speed.
Support for dual channel DDR2-667 MHz memory technology Support for increased performance memory technology.
Integrated high speed USB 2.0 Support for 10 USB 2.0 peripherals for maximum 40x faster data transfer and backward compatible to support USB 1.1 devices.
Intel® Matrix Storage Manager 7.0 Enables enhanced performance, power management and data protection for the storage subsystem.
Intel® Active Management Technology (Intel® AMT) 2.5 Support for new levels of manageability and support for PC clients in the business environment.

Friday, May 22, 2009

Mobile Intel PM45 Express Chipset

Mobile Intel® PM45 Express Chipset


The Mobile Intel® PM45 Express Chipset delivers Microsoft Windows Vista* Premium support with the highest level of Microsoft Windows Aero* experience.1 It delivers outstanding system performance through high-bandwidth interfaces such as dual-channel DDR3 and DDR2 memory support, 1066 MHz system bus, PCI Express* x16 graphics port and PCI Express x1 I/O ports, Serial ATA, and Hi-Speed USB 2.0 connectivity. Use of the Mobile Intel PM45 Express Chipset includes support for Intel® Active Management Technology (Intel® AMT) 4.0, the next generation of remote client network management for business. Use of the Mobile Intel PM45 Express Chipset also includes support for dual graphics with ATI CrossfireX*, for extreme gaming.

Features And Benefits

Microsoft Windows Vista* Premium support Enables Microsoft Windows Vista Premium logo and the highest level of Microsoft Windows Aero* experience with enabled DX 10 support.
1066 MHz Front Side Bus support Provides faster data transfer rate compared to previous generation bus speed.
Support for DDR3 and DDR2 memory technology Support for increased performance and more energy efficient memory technology.
Integrated high speed USB 2.0 Support for 12 USB 2.0 peripherals for maximum 40x faster data transfer and backward compatible to support USB 1.1 devices.
Intel® Matrix Storage Technology 7.0 Enables enhanced performance, power management and data protection for the storage subsystem.
Intel® Active Management Technology 4.0 Support for new levels of manageability and support for PC clients in the business environment.
ATI CrossFireX* support Enables support for dual graphics required for extreme gaming.

Thursday, May 21, 2009

Intel Core2 Solo Mobile Processor

The Intel® Core™2 Solo processor is the next-generation single-core mobile processor that provides freedom and flexibility to live, work, and play on-the-go. Intel® Core™2 Solo processor


Features And Benefits

Power efficiency

The Intel Core 2 Solo processor has new power-saving features designed to extend the life of your battery. +

Enhanced performance

The Intel Core 2 Solo processor is the next generation single-core processor for power-optimized mobile processing. It is enhanced to handle today's demanding software applications-such as CAD tools, 3D and 2D modeling or serious number-crunching programs.

Smarter, more efficient designs

Intel® Smart Cache enables smarter, more efficient cache and bus design for enhanced performance, responsiveness and power savings.

Intel® Centrino® processor technology

The Intel Core 2 Solo processor is one of many outstanding processor options for the Intel Centrino processor technology platform.

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Intel Core2 Duo Mobile Processor

Notebook freedom starts here. Unplug and multitask in more places.

Intel® Core™2 Duo mobile processor

When you power your laptop with an Intel® Core™2 Duo mobile processor, you'll get the performance you need for today's mobile multitasking. Built on the breakthrough 45nm hafnium-based technology, the Intel® Core™2 Duo mobile processor gives you plenty of power to run many demanding applications simultaneously, whether at home, in the office, or on on-the-go.

Monday, May 18, 2009

Intel Centrino Processor Technology

A new standard in mobile processing performance.

Intel® Centrino® processor technology

The world is your playground and with a notebook based on Intel® Centrino® processor technology, you can experience high-definition digital entertainment, blistering performance, enabled longer-lasting battery life, and the new wireless standard for connectivity.Φ

Intel 64-Bit Architecture

Intel® 64 Architecture

Intel® 64 architecture delivers 64-bit computing on server, workstation, desktop and mobile platforms when combined with supporting software.¹ Intel 64 architecture improves performance by allowing systems to address more than 4 GB of both virtual and physical memory.

Intel 64 provides support for:

  • 64-bit flat virtual address space
  • 64-bit pointers
  • 64-bit wide general purpose registers
  • 64-bit integer support
  • Up to one terabyte (TB) of platform address space

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Intel Core2 Extreme Dual-Core Mobile Processor - X9100)

Designed for gamers and power-users, the Intel Core 2 Extreme dual-core mobile processor the is world's highest performing dual-core processor&sup2. For those who want an intense, high-performance mobile computing experience, the Intel Core 2 Extreme dual-core mobile processor delivers revolutionary mobile dual-core performance with 3.06GHz frequency, 6MB of shared L2 Advanced Smart Cache, and Intel® Smart Memory Access with a blazing 1066MHz Front Side Bus (FSB).

Experience excellent mobile gaming and multimedia with the raw power, responsiveness and realism of revolutionary mobile dual-core performance. The Intel Core 2 Extreme dual-core mobile processor brings a whole new intensity to mobile gaming.

And just like its quad-core big brother, the Intel Core 2 Extreme dual-core mobile processor also offers the ultimate control to with bus ratio locks (overspeed protection) removed, so you can fine tune your notebook experience for maximum gaming performance.°

Friday, May 15, 2009

Intel Core2 Extreme Quad-Core Mobile Processor - QX9300)

Intel® Core™2 Extreme quad-core mobile processor (QX9300)

Achieving clock speeds of up to 2.53GHz, along with an astounding 12 MB of shared L2 cache and a 1066 MHz Front Side Bus (FSB), the Intel Core 2 Extreme quad-core mobile processor is your ultimate engine for hi-def multimedia while powering the latest generation of hardcore games.

The Intel Core 2 Extreme quad-core mobile processor has four cores processing multiple threads and multiple tasks at blistering speeds for an incredible "like you're there" experience in advanced artificial intelligence (AI), particle systems, dynamic physics, and texture generation. As your ultimate engine for creating rich, HD videos with up to 50 percent faster performance when encoding³ and editingΩ video, these processors enable you to perform like a multiple armed monster.

Thursday, May 14, 2009

Intel Core2 Extreme Mobile Processor

Intel® Core™2 Extreme Mobile Processor

Intel® Core™2 ExtremeDesigned from the ground up for extreme competitive gaming and HD multimedia on the fly, the Intel® Core™2 Extreme processors are the world's highest performing quad-core¹ and dual-core² mobile processors. Delivering all the performance of a desktop, enabled in a revolutionary, sleek, and killer notebook.

As your ultimate engine for hi-def digital content creation, HD multimedia, and a rockin' hardcore gaming experience, these notebooks provide the raw power, responsiveness, and realism you need for the most compute-intensive and multi-threaded apps-wherever you want to be.

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Intel Dual-Core Technology

Intel® Dual-Core Technology

Designed from the ground up for revolutionary energy-efficient performance, Intel® dual-core processors enable exceptional productivity enhancing features and rich multimedia experiences. As the catalyst for new processor architecture design, Intel dual-core processors have become the standard for our desktop, mobile, and server platforms.

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Intel Atom Processor for Mobile Internet Devices

Intel® Atom™ Processor for Mobile Internet Devices

Intel® Atom™ processor

For cutting-edge nomads seeking the best pocketable Internet experience, Intel® Atom™ processor for mobile internet devices unleashes the freedom and flexibility of Mobile Internet Devices (MIDs) enabling you to enjoy your entertainment or access the full Internet on the go.¹

Monday, May 11, 2009

A New Standard in Mobile Processing

A new standard in mobile processing performance

Intel® Centrino® 2 processor technology

The

world is your playground—and with a notebook based on Intel® Centrino® 2 processor technology, you can experience high-definition digital entertainment, blistering performance, enabled longer-lasting battery life, and the new wireless standard for connectivity.‡

Sunday, May 10, 2009

Intel Centrino With vPro Technology

Intel® Centrino® with vPro™ technology

Business takes you places-when it does, you want the best Intel®-based laptops for business with Intel® Centrino® with vPro™ technology. Combining remote manageability, unique hardware-assisted and proactive security features, and breakthrough mobile performance, these laptops provide reliability IT can trust, unleashed.

Saturday, May 9, 2009

Intel Centrino2 with vPro Technology

Keep Your Workforce More Secure, Managed, And Mobile.

With security and manageability built right onto the chip, Intel® Centrino® 2 with vPro™ technology provides hardware-assisted remote isolation, diagnostics, and repair

Intel® Centrino® 2 with vPro™ technology

, so you can manage your mobile workforce remotely, even if the system's OS is unresponsive.¹ And with exceptional dual-core performance, 5X better wireless performanceΩ and the longest possible battery life.²

Now you can also get notebooks with Intel Centrino 2 with vPro technology in astonishingly thin and light packages. As the smallest version of Intel® Centrino® processor technology yet-50 percent smaller-you're most mobile workforce can enjoy the sleekest full-featured and performance packed notebooks³ along with improved energy efficiency and power savings.°

Friday, May 8, 2009

One Intel Processor Per Child

One Intel Processor Per Child

According to the US Census Bureau, there are over 1.8 billion children in the world under the age of 14.

Intel would like to sell them all a processor. And, ideally, a chipset with graphics, some flash memory, and networking.

If there are going to be 1.8 billion $100 laptops, Intel might be able to earn $25 each, or $45 billion for the chips inside them.

Of course, AMD would also like to earn that revenue. Before this week, it looked like AMD had the inside track. AMD was in the right place at the right time when MIT professor Nicholas Negroponte proposed the idea for the $100 laptop, now known as the XO computer from the OLPC (One Laptop per Child) project.

Intel opposed the project, apparently just because AMD got there first.

But this week, Intel joined the project. Intel has announced plans for low-end x86 processors that should fit the bill, and the company will no doubt help in other ways. Also, Intel will undoubtedly learn a lot about this market, and build important contacts in the developing nations where the XO is expected to be most popular.

But Intel is so large that the OLPC project means only a slight increment in its revenue. To hit that $100 price-- the XO currently costs $175 or so-- the profit margin of the silicon vendors must be cut to the bone, and Intel simply isn't in the business of selling low-margin silicon. The real payoff for Intel will come if it can "sell up" potential XO customers.

But that would undermine the goal of the OLPC project, which is to get useful computers into the hands of the world's children at the lowest possible cost. We'll have to see if Intel is willing to compromise its own profitability for this cause.

Thursday, May 7, 2009

Intel Ships New Tools That Boost Game Performance

Intel® Graphics Performance Analyzers Suite Launches as Part of Visual Adrenaline Program to Advance Visual Computing Software

GAME DEVELOPERS CONFERENCE, San Francisco, March 23, 2009 – Intel Corporation today announced the release of Intel® Graphics Performance Analyzers (GPA), a suite of software tools created in support of the Visual Adrenaline developer program.

Offered worldwide, GPA enables PC game developers to analyze and optimize game performance on Intel® Integrated Graphics. The Visual Adrenaline program, launched at the Intel Developer Forum in San Francisco in August 2008, provides tools, resources and information for game developers, artists and animators.

GPA provides in-depth application analysis and customization so developers can pinpoint performance bottlenecks and optimize games for Intel-based desktop PCs and laptops that use Intel's chipsets. GPA consists of three components: System Analyzer, Frame Analyzer and the Software Development Kit (SDK). System Analyzer delivers high-level views of overall software performance, Frame Analyzer offers in-depth frame-by-frame performance analysis and the SDK enables developers to customize the suite according to their needs. Developers have the choice to run the tools locally or remotely through a network connection.

"Game developers need simple, yet powerful tools which enable them to create games that look real, act real and feel real," said Elliot Garbus, vice president and general manager of Intel's Visual Computing Software Division. "The Intel Graphics Performance Analyzers suite is the only software development toolkit that provides a holistic view of system performance for games running on Intel Integrated Graphics. Solving performance bottlenecks with GPA ensures developers are delivering the best gaming experience."

"Gas Powered Games is thrilled with the resources available to us as members of the Visual Adrenaline Developer Program," said Chris Taylor, CEO and founder of Gas Powered Games. "The competitive landscape requires tools that evolve with the industry and deliver rapid turn-around for graphics solutions. The Intel Graphics Performance Analyzers helped us unlock a higher level of optimization, making our games look even better and run on a broader spectrum of hardware configurations."

Intel Shows Smallest PC Motherboard At IDF

Intel showed what it considers the smallest PC motherboard in the world at the Intel Developers Forum (IDF) in Shanghai. The motherboard, or main PC circuit board, will go into the company's next-generation "Moorestown" mobile Internet device (MID) platform due in the 2009-2010 time frame.

Intel's Anand Chandrasekher holding motherboard

"Our engineers have been very hard at work on Moorestown," Anand Chandrasekher, senior vice president and general manager of Intel's Ultra Mobility Group, said during an IDF keynote speech Wednesday. "The platform design teams have been hard at work in figuring out what is the smallest form factor that they can actually fit a complete PC motherboard into so they can deliver a great mobile Internet experience."

"What I'm holding in my hand is what is possibly the world's smallest PC motherboard," Chandrasekher said. The Moorestown motherboard houses the processor, chipset (including graphics), and memory, along with silicon for 3G, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and GPS, he said. "This is the heart of the new machine."

Moorestown will be Intel's showcase system-on-a-chip, combining the CPU, graphics, and memory controller (and other silicon mentioned above) on a single die. It will likely be the main launching pad for Intel into the mobile phone market--what the chipmaker calls "MID phones." Moorestown may also be a major market for Intel's upcoming solid-state drives.

Intel Moorestown platform

Intel Celeron M Processor

Intel® Celeron® M processor Based on an architecture designed specifically for mobile computing, the Intel® Celeron® M Processor delivers a balanced level of mobile processor technology and exceptional value for sleeker, lighter laptop designs.


Intel® Celeron® M Processor
->Processor NumberΔ Intel® 64 architecture 530, 523, 520
->Architecture 65 nm, 90 nm, 130 nm process technology 130 nm process technology
->L2 Cache 1MB, 512KB 512KB
->Clock Speed 1.20 to 2 GHz NA
->Clock Speed--Ultra
900 MHz to 1.20 GHz 800 MHz
->Front Side Bus 400 MHz and 533 MHz 400 MHz
->Chipsets
Mobile Intel® 945 Express Chipset Family
Mobile Intel® 940 GML Express Chipset
Mobile Intel® 915 Express Chipset Family
Mobile Intel® 910 GML Express Chipset
Intel® 855 Chipset Family
Intel® 852GM Chipset
->Related Products
Intel® Core™2 Duo processor
Intel® Pentium® M processor
->Ther Key Features
Execute Disable Bit° (520, 450, 443, 440, 430, 423, 420, 410, 390, 383, 380, 360J and 350J products only)
Intel® 64 architectureΦ (520 product only)
Mobile optimized architecture
Low power technologies
Streaming SIMD Extensions 2
Micro FCPGA & FCBGA packaging technology (ULV parts only available in FCBGA)

Mobile Intel GS45 Express Chipset

Mobile Intel® GS45 Express Chipset

The mobile Intel® GS45 Express Chipset , featuring the mobile Intel® Graphics Media Accelerator (GMA) 4500MHD, delivers
  • Microsoft Windows Vista* Premium support with the highest level of Windows Aero* experience
  • Blu-ray* logo capable HD video playback, with native support for Blu-ray* drives
  • Great 3D graphics performance
  • Intel® Clear Video Technology for excellent video quality

The mobile Intel® GS45 Express chipset features hardware based decoding for Blu-ray content, dual-channel DDR3 and DDR2 memory support, up to 1066 MHz system bus, PCI Express* x16 graphics ports and PCI Express x1 I/O ports, Serial ATA, and Hi-Speed USB 2.0 connectivity.

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Intel Campaigns To Polish Its Brand

But when Intel was developing its biggest advertising campaign in years, it handed a carefully thought-out brief to the ad agency Venables Bell & Partners, which said Intel's idea--to talk about the company's role in everyday life--was, in a word, bad.

Intel's notion was, "we're so important to your everyday life. Imagine a world without Intel. Your lights would go out. The world would stop revolving," said Deborah Conrad, vice president and general manager of Intel's corporate marketing group. "Venables Bell said, 'You got that wrong.'"

Intel ad

The campaign that Venables Bell fashioned, which begins Monday in the United States, focuses instead on the amusingly weird, technology-focused culture of Intel and celebrates the company's role in the future, rather than the present. The tagline is "Sponsors of Tomorrow," and the ads highlight achievements of Intel engineers in a humorous way.

The campaign is Intel's first that focuses on its brand rather than its products, Conrad said. It is Intel's most expensive campaign since 2006, and the company wants it to run for at least three years.

One of the company's challenges is that people do not buy products from Intel directly--it makes chips and materials that go into electronics made by Dell and Hewlett-Packard, among others.

"The fact that we're an ingredient, it's easy to get lost," Conrad said. "We really needed to put some meaning into Intel, so 'Intel inside' means something again."

Before it created the campaign, Venables Bell pulled together clips from 20 or so commercials for technology companies and realized that pretty much every company had talked about its role in the present.

"Every cell phone company, every printer company, gosh, even Web sites, even Cisco--Cisco makes routers!--they're all claiming to be the ones delivering that everyday life angle," said Greg Bell, co-creative director and founder of Venables Bell, based in San Francisco. "It's just really trite."

So the agency began looking at what Intel had actually produced in terms of research and development, and found that Intel's engineers really were not working on powering today's world. They were working on projects that were a few years from hitting the market. That inspired the tagline "Sponsors of Tomorrow."

As for the advertising, "we went into the pitch with our perception: 'Well, they're kind of just a big microprocessor company, so it should be interesting to put a shine on that,'" Bell said.

Then ad executives began spending time at Intel, and noticed its appealing culture. "We started thinking about Intel, like, 'OK, what's it like in the cafeteria when they're in there eating lunch together?' There's got to be a whole hierarchy of people in there who they admire," Bell said. That inspired the ads' theme: the odd technophile Intel culture.

In one television ad, a group of employees gape, scream and writhe as a middle-aged Indian man in a navy vest, an ID tag hanging from his neck, struts through a break room. One employee rips open his button-down shirt to reveal a T-shirt with the man's image on it, while another worker clamors for his autograph. "Ajay Bhatt, co-inventor of USB," an on-screen graphic reads as the man, an actor, winks at an admirer. "Our rock stars aren't like your rock stars."

Intel ad
Credit: Intel
One of Intel's new tongue-in-cheek
commercials show employees drooling
over a tech inventor.

In a related print ad, photographs depict a group of rock musicians next to lab workers in white coats. "Your rock stars aren't like our rock stars," the ad reads.

The real inventors are not in the ads; they are played by actors. Bell said he wanted to ensure the commercials were humorous, and avoid arguments with Intel employees over which should be featured.

"When you are required politically to cast certain people and get everyone involved, you tend to get this watered-down, feel-good campaign that works really well internally and makes the company itself feel good," but does not appeal to consumers, he said.

The ads will run in about 30 countries by the end of June, with media buying handled by OMD, a unit of the Omnicom Group. Intel asked for ads where it would not have to change much besides the language from country to country. Still, when Intel hired a London company called Tag to advise it on adjusting the ads globally, Tag suggested certain changes.

What is seen as a funny comparison in the United States, Tag told Intel, could be offensive elsewhere. One American ad shows a little girl smiling over her neat bedroom, and another shows technicians wearing spacesuit-like outfits in an immaculate Intel factory.

Intel logo
Intel's new marketing slogan.

"Your clean room isn't like our clean room," it reads. But in China, that comparison can be seen as offensive. "In China, you've got to appear like you're not talking down about another group for the sake of making your group look good," Bell said. "You've got to be careful if they think that comes off as arrogant." So the agency adapted that ad to show engraved jade next to an intricate Intel chip. "Your exquisite carving isn't like our exquisite carving," it says.

The campaign also includes digital elements. The company is doing a homepage takeover on NYTimes.com on Monday. Visitors to the site will see a version of a paper as though it were 2040, with headlines like "Star Athlete Tests Positive for Android." "We're really excited about it but we're a little cautious" Conrad said. "We think we've done this in a tasteful, fun way."

It also includes digital billboards in Times Square, Berlin, Los Angeles, San Francisco and several other locations, with questions like, "What do you hope to see in the future?" Viewers can send text responses to a special number. A few minutes later, after Intel has reviewed the answers for appropriateness, the responses will appear on billboards throughout the United States.

Despite sliding sales at Intel, where first-quarter revenue fell 26 percent to $7.1 billion and profit fell 55 percent, Conrad said this was a smart time to spend money on marketing. The co-founder of Intel, Gordon Moore, has always encouraged spending in a recession, she said.

"His whole view was you should invest during the recession so when you come out of it, you're in a leadership position, not two steps behind," she said. "Year in, year out, you'll see us investing."

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Intel Shows Off 80-Core Processor

Intel has built its 80-core processor as part of a research project, but don't expect it to boost your Doom score just yet.

Chief Technical Officer Justin Rattner demonstrated the processor in San Francisco last week for a group of reporters, and the company will present a paper on the project during the International Solid State Circuits Conference in the city this week.

The chip is capable of producing 1 trillion floating-point operations per second, known as a teraflop. That's a level of performance that required 2,500 square feet of large computers a decade ago.

Intel first disclosed it had built a prototype 80-core processor during last fall's Intel Developer Forum, when CEO Paul Otellini promised to deliver the chip within five years. The company's researchers have several hurdles to overcome before PCs and servers come with 80-core processors--such as how to connect the chip to memory and how to teach software developers to write programs for it--but the research chip is an important step, Rattner said.

intel80core

A company called ClearSpeed has put 96 cores on a single chip. ClearSpeed's chips are used as co-processors with supercomputers that require a powerful chip for a very specific purpose.

Intel's research chip has 80 cores, or "tiles," Rattner said. Each tile has a computing element and a router, allowing it to crunch data individually and transport that data to neighboring tiles.

Intel used 100 million transistors on the chip, which measures 275 millimeters squared. By comparison, its Core 2 Duo chip uses 291 million transistors and measures 143 millimeters squared. The chip was built using Intel's 65-nanometer manufacturing technology, but any likely product based on the design would probably use a future process based on smaller transistors. A chip the size of the current research chip is likely too large for cost-effective manufacturing.

The computing elements are very basic and do not use the x86 instruction set used by Intel and Advanced Micro Devices' chips, which means Windows Vista can't be run on the research chip. Instead, the chip uses a VLIW (very long instruction word) architecture, a simpler approach to computing than the x86 instruction set.

There's also no way at present to connect this chip to memory. Intel is working on a stacked memory chip that it could place on top of the research chip, and it's talking to memory companies about next-generation designs for memory chips, Rattner said.

Intel's researchers will then have to figure out how to create general-purpose processing cores that can handle the wide variety of applications in the world. The company is still looking at a five-year timeframe for product delivery, Rattner said.

But the primary challenge for an 80-core chip will be figuring out how to write software that can take advantage of all that horsepower. The PC software community is just starting to get its hands around multicore programming, although its server counterparts are a little further ahead. Still, Microsoft, Apple and the Linux community have a long way to go before they'll be able to effectively utilize 80 individual processing units with their PC operating systems.

"The operating system has the most control over the CPU, and it's got to change," said Jim McGregor, an analyst at In-Stat. "It has to be more intelligent about breaking things up," he said, referring to how tasks are divided among multiple processing cores.

"I think we're sort of all moving forward here together," Rattner said. "As the core count grows and people get the skills to use them effectively, these applications will come." Intel hopes to make it easier by training its army of software developers on creating tools and libraries, he said.

Intel demonstrated the chip running an application created for solving differential equations. At 3.16GHz and with 0.95 volts applied to the processor, it can hit 1 teraflop of performance while consuming 62 watts of power. Intel constructed a special motherboard and cooling system for the demonstration in a San Francisco hotel.

Monday, May 4, 2009

The Fastest Processor Ever by INTEL

The Fastest Processor Ever by INTEL
Intel Has launched the new Core 7 Processor, The processor is really amazing, and it considered as the fastest Intel Processor ever.
intel-logo
Processor and a new official name of “I Core 7″ was developed under the code name “Nihalm” It is the first quad-core processor produced by “Intel” specializing in computer chips.

And put “Intel” processor in the new three copies of the best “any Corps 7 - 965,” which described magazine “Computer Bild” after the test as “the fastest processor has already tested the magazine at all.” Characterized by three copies of “any Corps 7″ as faster processors of the best company, “Intel” in existing markets, namely a dual-core processor, “Intel Core 2 Extreme X-kyu 9770.”

Can each of the four core processor in the “Core any 7″ single entry on the temporary memory of computers, which gives the high-speed performance, and the new chip-enabled “Heiberthreyding” which allowed him to perform more than one job at the same time.

For his part, Martin Strobl spokesman, “Intel” in the German city of Munich that the secret behind the high-speed performance is not due to the existence of four separate nuclei, but due to the new unit to control the memory and processor installed within itself and allow the speedy delivery of data between memory chip and operating in Computer.

The new processor will require “any 7-Cours,” the latest type of major paintings, and this can not run on older PCs without a major change in her paintings, is expected to put the paintings are compatible with the new processor on the market soon. Strobl says that the new chip “will not only serve the people who use computers to surf the Internet or dealing with Office applications.”

He adds a chip Andreas brominated magazine “Computer Bild that” processor “Intel Core any 7″ will also act more quickly when dealing with audio files, but the strength of this processor is clearly reflected in dealing with images and video files as well as computer games, which are heavily visual effects.

Intel Pentium 4 Socket 478 Processor 1.7 GHz


(openPR) - Advantech announced in separate releases, two new 10GE-enabled products exclusively tuned for the quad-core Intel® Xeon® Processor 5500 Series which Intel introduced today.

The Advantech FWA-6500 adds a new performance point to high end multi-core security and network application platforms. With incredible 8-core / 16-threaded performance the FWA-6500 is able to handle massive throughput thanks to Intel’s highest performing extended lifecycle processors to date, the Intel® Xeon® processor 5500 series.

Sunday, May 3, 2009

Intel® RAID Controller SRCSAS18E


An Eight-Port RAID Solution Delivering High Performance and Reliability

The Intel® RAID Controller SRCSAS18E is the first Intel RAID Controller to support both Serial ATA (SATA) and Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) devices. This gives businesses the ability to customize RAID solutions and help lower the total cost of ownership with a standardized server and storage infrastructure.

The RAID Controller SRCSAS18E supports RAID 0, 1, 5, 10, and 50 and enclosure management using SAF-TE, SES2, and Serial GPIO protocols. The controller simplifies long-term server operation and maintenance by providing auto rebuild, remote Web-based management of the RAID array through the Intel RAID Web Console 2 utility, and both online capacity expansion and RAID-level migration.

Saturday, May 2, 2009

Intel® RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I


The Intel® RAID Controller SRCSASPH16I addresses data availability concerns that arise when large numbers of drives are deployed in mission-critical environments. With 16 internal ports, this SAS/SATA RAID solution can directly connect to SAS or SATA hard drives. This adapter can support up to 122 physical devices for the most storage-intensive environments.

Friday, May 1, 2009

Intel® Workstation Board S5000XVN


High performance board delivers the power of multi-core, dual-sockets to the demanding workstation environment

The Intel® Workstation Board S5000XVN provides incredible performance and memory capacity for demanding workstation operations. This workstation board is ideal for customers needing server class performance and reliability, in addition to high-end graphics. The Intel Workstation Board S5000XVN is acoustically optimized to minimize distractions in shared environments. Supports the latest generation of Microsoft Windows Vista* operating systems.