Archive for the ‘intel’ Category
Friday, September 5th, 2008
Filed under: Handhelds, Laptops
Just as you were getting your head wrapped around Atom-branded Diamondville-class processors based on a Silverthorne architecture, along comes the next generation. Expected to arrive in Q3 of 2009, the new 45-nm Pineview processors will come in hyperthreaded single- and dual-core versions like the current generation Atom 2xx- and 3xx-series. However, the procs will be based on a new Lincroft micro-architecture boasting an integrated graphics core and memory manager that connects to memory via DMI, not a FSB. Unfortunately, the all important TDP power-draw off your tiny netbook’s battery in currently undefined. Hit the read link for the full roadmap and processor timeline if that’s the kind of thing that twirls your propellor.
[Via RegHardware]
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Original post by Thomas Ricker
Posted in dmi, fsb533, lincroft, pineview, roadmap, diamondville, netbook, atom, Silverthorne, intel | No Comments »
Thursday, September 4th, 2008
Filed under: Desktops
Intel is keeping a rightly low-key approach with this announcement, but if you’re somehow not satisfied with any of its current processor offerings, you may find something more to your liking among the three it slipped out over the Labor Day weekend. Those include the 45nm Core 2 Quad 8200, which clocks in at 2.33GHz with 4MB of L2 cache and a 1333MHz FSB, and gets a somewhat more budget-friendly $230 price tag at the expense of support for things like Intel’s Virtualization Technology and Trusted Execution Technology. If that’s a bit much, you can also now snag the dual-core, 2.5GHz E5200, which packs 2MB of L2 cache and 800MHz FSB for $84, or the single-core 65nm Celeron 450, which rolls in at a respectable 2.2GHz and includes 512K of L2 and an 800MHz FSB for a mere $53. Hit up the read link below for the complete breakdown.
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Original post by Donald Melanson
Posted in celeron, celeron 450, Celeron450, e5200, 8200, Core2Quad, processor, cpu, core 2 quad, intel | No Comments »
Wednesday, September 3rd, 2008
motang writes “Chinese government funded Godson-3 a CPU that is developed to bring personal computing to majority of Chinese people by the year 2010. Will this pose any threat to Intel?”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Original post by CmdrTaco
Posted in intel | No Comments »
Tuesday, September 2nd, 2008
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
We’ve managed to somewhat wrap our brains around shape-shifting robots and printable circuits, but we’re still working on fully understanding the latest Intel spill. As IDF came to a close, Justin Rattner, Intel’s chief technology officer, presented a keynote speech in which he explained just how close the outfit was to realizing “programmable matter.” Granted, he did confess that end products were still years away, but researchers have been looking at ways to “make an object of any imaginable shape,” where users could simply hit a print button and watch the matter “take that shape.” He also explained that the idea of programmable matter “revolves around tiny glass spheres with processing power and photovoltaic for generating electricity to run the tiny circuitry.” For those now sitting with a blank stare on their face (read: that’s pretty much all of you, no?), hit up the read link for even more mind-boggling “explanations.”
[Via MAKE]
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Original post by Darren Murph
Posted in Idf2008, shape-shifting, IDF 2008, idf, photovoltaic, programmable, intel | No Comments »
Monday, September 1st, 2008
Filed under: Laptops
Ready to inhale some serious Intel technobabble? Here goes. As it stands, MIDs and UMPCs that utilize Windows operating systems are pretty much restricted to using Vista due to their incongruence with the “low-cost” requirement for still using XP. On top of that, Intel’s chipset used in these critters (you know, with those Silverthorne Atom CPUs) only supports 1GB of RAM. We don’t need to explain how underwhelming performance can be when mixing Vista with just 1GB of RAM. Now, however, a new PDF from Intel details updated System Controller Hub (SCH) specifications that include support for up to 2GB of RAM. What isn’t clear is whether current systems can be updated via a BIOS update, but we’ll be keeping an ear to the ground in hopes of hearing “yes.”
[Thanks, Itto]
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Original post by Darren Murph
Posted in eee, ram, bios, restriction, asus, umpc, intel, Vista, netbook, windows | No Comments »
Sunday, August 31st, 2008
nerdyH writes with the news that Intel has acquired OpenedHand, the developer of ‘Poky Linux’ and Matchbox. “The UK-based embedded Linux services team will join the Intel Open Source Technology Center, and will focus on Moblin development for mobile Internet devices and other mobile devices.” The article notes that Intel’s Moblin initiative had “failed to generate much interest” among developers when first announced earlier this year; this acquisition might help it catch the attention of more Linux developers.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Original post by kdawson
Posted in intel | No Comments »
Friday, August 29th, 2008
Filed under: Household
The age of the house call is long gone, and until we manage to replace all our bodily organs with cybernetic proxies, medical gadgets are our only hope to minimize those pesky office visits. The Health PHS5000 (aka Dr. Touch) from LG and Intel isn’t the first of its kind, but it is the latest such device, and it’s been recently introduced exclusively in Japan to begin medical trials. The little white box with a friendly UI (smileys mean you’re not dead yet, we presume) can track things like blood pressure and sugar levels, and will even send reports to your doctor’s office — meaning your terminal laziness can reach astronomical new heights… er, lows. It’s perfect for the disabled or merely reclusive, and with any luck will be hacked soon to allow Wii Fit integration.
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Original post by Tim Stevens
Posted in HealthCare, hmo, Intel Health PHS5000, IntelHealthPhs5000, health care, DrTouch, LG, doctor, dr touch, intel | No Comments »
Thursday, August 28th, 2008
Filed under: Desktops, Gaming
It may not have produced quite the onslaught of news that Intel’s recent
Developer Forum did, but it looks like NVIDIA’s NVISION08 conference was at least able to pull one big rabbit out of its hat, with NVIDIA itself dropping word that it’s going to allow Intel’s X58 chipset to natively support SLI. For those not following the ins and outs of the NVIDIA / Intel relationship, NVIDIA had previously said that it would let its nForce 200 chip to be implemented by board manufacturers to allow SLI support, but that idea never exactly caught on, leading to this new, more accommodating solution. As PC Perspective reports, the native SLI support will also be far from limited, with motherboards with as few as two PCIe x16 slots and as many as four PCIe x16 slots able to support an array of SLI configurations, including a 3-Way SLI with a fourth graphics card for a PhysX boost.
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Original post by Donald Melanson
Posted in x58, nvision08, SLI, nvidia, intel | No Comments »
Wednesday, August 27th, 2008
Filed under: Desktops, Laptops
NVIDIA CEO Jen-Hsun Huang just can’t resist throwing more jabs at Intel, distracting the inaugural NVISION crowd from Battlestar Galactica star Tricia Helfer with the claim that “Larrabee hasn’t shipped so you don’t know what it is and I don’t know what it is.” The fact that we do know what it is — a next-gen hybrid CPU / GPU — shouldn’t be a concern according to Huang, because “By the time it does ship, Nvidia’s technology will be so far advanced it won’t matter.” Besides stuffing Usain Bolt-type speed into a GPU the company will keep busy working on its WinMo smartphone hardware, and software for the not-exactly-Atom-killing VIA Nano, but forget about that rumored x86-compatible hardware ‘cuz, as Jen-Hsun reminds us, “the Internet doesn’t run on x86.” For a company that lacks innovation, is “a joke,” and at least four years behind, Intel must be doing something right, because the competition can’t keep its name out of their mouths.
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Original post by Richard Lawler
Posted in ce oh no he didnt, ce oh no, CeOhNo, CeOhNoHeDidnt, IntegratedGraphics, integrated graphics, bsg, nvision, nvidia, graphics, larrabee, via nano, ViaNano, intel | No Comments »
Tuesday, August 26th, 2008
Intel has unveiled the third generation of its low-cost laptop for students, which branches out from the standard clamshell design with a tablet-style option and includes a touch screen.
Introduced at the recent Intel Developer Forum 2008 in San Francisco, the new Classmate PC – slated for deployment by the end of this year — is aimed primarily at students worldwide in grades 3-8.
“We spent a lot of time with ethnographers, building this Classmate with students in mind,” said Jeff Galinovsky, regional manager for the Classmate PC. “We’ve been collecting over two years of research to help develop the best PC for students.”
Since its initial release in 2007, Intel has developed two prior versions of the Classmate PC: the rugged, camera-equipped, first-generation Classmate, and the Atom processor Classmate introduced in June.
The Atom processor is Intel’s smallest chip, built for low power consumption and designed specifically for a new wave of mobile internet devices and simple, low-cost PCs, Intel said.
Like Intel’s previous laptops, the new Classmate’s design concept will allow for local original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) to release versions of the computer with different colors or decorations. Examples of these OEM-branded Classmate PCs include the HCL MiLeap (India), Olidata’s JumPC (Italy), FTEC’s SmartBook (Malaysia), Neo’s eXplore (Philippines), and CTL’s 2Go PC (United States).
Tags: atom processor, classmate pc, intel
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Original post by nafiz
Posted in atom processor, students, classmate, classmate pc, Computer Hardware, intel | No Comments »
Monday, August 25th, 2008
Filed under: Gaming, Peripherals
You’ve got to love it, don’t you? The prolonged hatefest between Intel and NVIDIA is continuing on today, with Andy Keane, general manager of the company’s GPU computing group, delivering the latest blow. While speaking to reporters at the outfit’s headquarters in Sunnyvale, California, he was quoted as saying that there is still “an incredible amount about Larrabee that’s undefined.” Furthermore, John Mottram chimed in by suggesting that “as [blogger and CPU architect] Peter Glaskowsky said, the ‘large’ Larrabee in 2010 will have roughly the same performance as a 2006 GPU from NVIDIA or ATI.” We’re beginning to wonder if these guys aren’t just passing disses while sharing a cold one afterwards just to get attention, but being that it’s more fun to envision suits from rival firms intensely angry with one another, we’ll just keep believing this actually isn’t a joke.
[Via Slashdot]
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Original post by Darren Murph
Posted in larrabee, bicker, fight, GraphicsCard, graphics card, graphics, nvidia, gpu, intel | No Comments »
Friday, August 22nd, 2008
MojoKid writes “Intel’s next-generation CPU microarchitecture, which was recently given the official processor family name of ‘Core i7,’ was one of the big topics of discussion at IDF. Intel claims that Nehalem represents its biggest platform architecture change to date. This might be true, but it is not a from-the-ground-up, completely new architecture either. Intel representatives disclosed that Nehalem ’shares a significant portion of the P6 gene pool,’ does not include many new instructions, and has approximately the same length pipeline as Penryn. Nehalem is built upon Penryn, but with significant architectural changes (full webcast) to improve performance and power efficiency. Nehalem also brings Hyper-Threading back to Intel processors, and while Hyper-Threading has been criticized in the past as being energy inefficient, Intel claims their current iteration of Hyper-Threading on Nehalem is much better in that regard.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Original post by Soulskill
Posted in intel | No Comments »
Friday, August 22nd, 2008
Filed under: Laptops
Not exactly many surprises here, but it looks like Intel used its big
Developer Forum this week to finally, and quietly, get official with its tiny new Core 2 Duo “S” processor, which is the stock version of the processor used in laptops like the MacBook Air and
Voodoo Envy 133. The new 45nm processors boast same 1,066MHz system bus and 6MB of Level 2 cache as the newer Core 2 Duos, and will apparently be available in 1.6GHz and 1.86GHz versions to start with (dubbed the SL9300 and SL9400, respectively). That, of course, hasn’t stopped folks from speculating that Apple will once again go its own way and push well past the 2.0GHz mark for its
seemingly imminent MacBook Air revision, but we’d recommend waiting for some official word out of Cupertino before getting too excited about that tantalizing possibility.
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Original post by Donald Melanson
Posted in core 2 duo s, Core2DuoS, MacbookAir, Core2Duo, macbook air, core 2 duo, intel | No Comments »
Friday, August 22nd, 2008
Filed under: Storage
Remember that MetaRAM technology we figured was nothing more than a sophisticated joke back in February? Intel, one of the noteworthy backers, has proven that said tech actually is one rung above snake-oil at its own Developers Conference in San Francisco. Hynix-made DDR3 DIMMs packing 16GB of memory were reportedly created via the MetaRAM method (and subsequently shown off), and just in case you’re not wowed by such wizardry, the demo system included no fewer than ten of these modules. Just in case that sort of flew over your head, the machine they were in possessed 160GB of RAM. Unfortunately, we’ve a feeling these are quite aways out from hitting the consumer market.
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Original post by Darren Murph
Posted in Idf2008, IDF 2008, 16gb, dimm, MetaRAM, idf, memory, dram, hynix, ram, nehalem, intel | No Comments »
Friday, August 22nd, 2008
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets

If Intel’s CTO is correct, then man and machine could merge by the year 2050. Justin Rattner said that Intel’s research labs are looking at human-machine interfaces and predicts that promising changes could come sooner than expected. For example, did you know that Intel is working on tiny, shape-shifting robots called “catoms” — tiny inside the pocket, a million-strong team of micro-robots could one day reassemble into an earpiece, keyboard or say, full-torso heat shield that withstands the frictions of hyperspace (ok, we made that last bit up). During his keynote, Rattner said, “There is speculation that we may be approaching an inflection point where the rate of technology advancements is accelerating at an exponential rate, and machines could even overtake humans in their ability to reason, in the not so distant future.” A date he pegs at 2050, not December 21st, 2012 as some would say. But with wireless power and 3-dimensional transistors on the horizon, well, who are we to argue? Besides, Intel has a pretty good record when it comes to predicting advances in technology, eh Gordie?
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Original post by Thomas Ricker
Posted in JustinRattner, justin Rattner, catoms, singularity, intel | No Comments »