internet.com
You are in the: Small Business Computing Channelarrow
Small Business Technology
» ECommerce-Guide | Small Business Computing | Webopedia | WinPlanet |Refer-It

WinPlanet Software Downloads and Reviews for Small Businesses
Search
Power Search | Tips
-
Navigate WinPlanet
WinPlanet Home Page

Software
Download Index
In-Depth Reviews
Tips & Tutorials
Updates
News

Software Categories
Browsers
Chat / Conferencing
Desktop Utilities
Development
Internet Apps
Multimedia
OS Service Packs
Productivity Tools

Software Glossary

WinPlanet Newsletter

internet.commerce
Partners & Affiliates













Small Business Computing
Small Business Computing
Ecommerce Guide
Webopedia
WinPlanet

WinPlanet / News

Download of the day
Norton AntiVirus 2008

Most Popular Software Downloads
Ad-Aware 2008 Free
Windows XP Service Pack 3
Internet Explorer 7
QuickTime for Windows
Adobe Flash Player
AVG Anti-Virus Free
Paint Shop Pro
Windows Live Suite
CCleaner (Crap Cleaner)
Winamp

Most Popular Software Articles
Windows Vista Tips & Tricks, Part 1
Windows Vista: Worthy of the Hype?
Windows Wireless Zero Configuration: Five Steps to Sanity


Software Reviews

Intel Moving Millions
New Intel Core 2 Duo Chip Makes Its Debut
David Needle

Intel herded over 500 press, analysts and customers into an air-conditioned tent at its headquarters in Santa Clara, Calif. for a splashy rollout of its Core 2 Duo line.

The event marked the formal launch of five versions each of Core 2 Duo for the desktop and mobile markets.

The last time Intel chose to launch a processor at its headquarters was 13 years ago for its best-selling Pentium. "I think it's a good omen," said Intel CEO Paul Otellini.

Back then it took a full year before Intel (Quote, Chart) shipped a million of the now ubiquitous Pentium processors.

Now Otellini said Intel will ship a million Core 2 Duos in fewer than seven weeks. Intel also has a lot more help to reach such heady numbers with over 550 design wins, the most ever for one of its new processors at launch.

"This is the best microprocessor we've ever designed," said Otellini, who noted Intel has essentially refreshed its entire product line this summer with today's announcement and the earlier release of new server families.

The "Conroe" desktop version of Core 2 Duo is available in desktops starting today. The "Merom" mobile version will be in systems for sale by the end of August.

"The biggest takeaway from this is that Intel now has a single architecture for its major platforms: desktop, mobile and servers," Bob O'Donnell, vice president at research firm IDC, told internetnews.com.

"This lets them make improvements across the board in a more timely manner."

Core 2 Duo represents a major performance boost from the current Pentium 4 generation.

Intel said the desktop Core 2 Duo offers as much as a 40 percent improvement in performance and an equal percentage of energy savings.

On the mobile side, Core 2 Duo offers as much as a 20 percent performance boost with the same power overhead.

Analyst O'Donnell noted that Intel has now eclipsed AMD (Quote, Chart) in performance, but the far bigger jump is how much it's improved on its own Pentium line.

"This was also a very fast ramp up. When Intel went from Pentium to Pentium II and Pentium III, that was at least an 18 month cyle," said O'Donnell.

"It's only been about six months since Core Duo came out."

Analyst Nathan Brookwood said it's not surprising Intel has finally jumped ahead of pesky competitor AMD.

"AMD's architecture has been out there for about three years. I don't see AMD responding in a major way until next year, and then we'll see.

"But at least AMD's in the game and the performance race is likely to go back and forth. For a long time, AMD couldn't really compete."

Intel is positioning Core 2 Duo as a premium, top of the line processor with prices in quantity ranging from just under $200 for mainstream desktops to as much as $900 for the Core Two Extreme.

Not to be left out of today's launch were the gamers.

Normally straight-laced Intel welcomed two professional gamers from the Frag Dolls onstage to show off the fast response time Core 2 Duo systems offer gamers.

Then nVidia shared the stage to preview some upcoming video games that take advantage of Core 2 Duo and nVidia's graphics card.

"We're now able to offer film quality graphics in real time," said Daniel Vivoli, senior vice president of marketing for nVidia.

Intel would not confirm or deny rumors that it uninvited graphics chip maker ATI from the event following AMD's announcement earlier this week that it planned to buy ATI. In response to a question about an ATI ban, Intel vice president Sean Maloney pointed to the exhibit area and said: "There are five ATI systems out there."

Except that computer makers exhibited those systems; ATI did not directly participate.

Computer superstore Micro Center held an event at one of its locations nearby following Intel's rollout to show off a house brand system based on Core 2 Duo.

The PowerSpec Extreme 9800 is a a $4,500 high end gaming system. The system includes two ATI Radeon X1900 XTX graphics cards, each with 512MB of GDDR3 dedicated video memory.

News courtesy of internetnews.com

July 28, 2006

Contents:
1. New Intel Core 2 Duo Chip Makes Its Debut






JupiterOnlineMedia

internet.comearthweb.comDevx.commediabistro.comGraphics.com

Search:

Jupitermedia Corporation has two divisions: Jupiterimages and JupiterOnlineMedia

Jupitermedia Corporate Info


Legal Notices, Licensing, Reprints, & Permissions, Privacy Policy.

Advertise | Newsletters | Tech Jobs | Shopping | E-mail Offers

Solutions
Whitepapers and eBooks
Microsoft Article: Will Hyper-V Make VMware This Decade's Netscape?
Microsoft Article: 7.0, Microsoft's Lucky Version?
Microsoft Article: Hyper-V--The Killer Feature in Windows Server 2008
Avaya Article: How to Feed Data into the Avaya Event Processor
Microsoft Article: Install What You Need with Windows Server 2008
HP eBook: Putting the Green into IT
Whitepaper: HP Integrated Citrix XenServer for HP ProLiant Servers
Intel Go Parallel Portal: Interview with C++ Guru Herb Sutter, Part 1
Intel Go Parallel Portal: Interview with C++ Guru Herb Sutter, Part 2--The Future of Concurrency
Avaya Article: Setting Up a SIP A/S Development Environment
IBM Article: How Cool Is Your Data Center?
Microsoft Article: Managing Virtual Machines with Microsoft System Center
HP eBook: Storage Networking , Part 1
Microsoft Article: Solving Data Center Complexity with Microsoft System Center Configuration Manager 2007
MORE WHITEPAPERS, EBOOKS, AND ARTICLES
Webcasts
Intel Video: Are Multi-core Processors Here to Stay?
On-Demand Webcast: Five Virtualization Trends to Watch
HP Video: Page Cost Calculator
Intel Video: APIs for Parallel Programming
HP Webcast: Storage Is Changing Fast - Be Ready or Be Left Behind
Microsoft Silverlight Video: Creating Fading Controls with Expression Design and Expression Blend 2
MORE WEBCASTS, PODCASTS, AND VIDEOS
Downloads and eKits
Sun Download: Solaris 8 Migration Assistant
Sybase Download: SQL Anywhere Developer Edition
Red Gate Download: SQL Backup Pro and free DBA Best Practices eBook
Red Gate Download: SQL Compare Pro 6
Iron Speed Designer Application Generator
MORE DOWNLOADS, EKITS, AND FREE TRIALS
Tutorials and Demos
How-to-Article: Preparing for Hyper-Threading Technology and Dual Core Technology
eTouch PDF: Conquering the Tyranny of E-Mail and Word Processors
IBM Article: Collaborating in the High-Performance Workplace
HP Demo: StorageWorks EVA4400
Intel Featured Algorhythm: Intel Threading Building Blocks--The Pipeline Class
Microsoft How-to Article: Get Going with Silverlight and Windows Live
MORE TUTORIALS, DEMOS AND STEP-BY-STEP GUIDES