Advertisement
Promo

Server platforms Toolkit

Dual-core Intel chips hit the market

Michael Kanellos CNET News

Published: 18 Apr 2005 09:05 BST

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

A few PC makers will start selling PCs containing dual-core chips from Intel on Monday, three days ahead of the debut of the dual cores.

Dell, Alienware and a few others are preparing to take orders on Monday for PCs containing these chips, an Intel spokesman said. The companies will also be able to ship these PCs to customers. Although volumes of the Extreme Edition Pentium 4, code-named Smithfield, will initially be low, Intel will ship millions of dual-core chips by the end of the year, the spokesman said.

By the end of 2006, Intel expects that 70 percent of its server chips and 85 percent of its desktop and notebook chips will be dual core, the company has said.

Intel's pre-emptive strike is likely to give it the right to claim being the first to ship dual-core x86 chips. AMD is slated to release dual-core Opteron chips for servers and workstations on April 21. HP, however, is currently taking pre-orders on dual-core Opteron servers.

Intel's dual-core chips will run at 3.2GHz, slower than existing Pentium 4s, and will have an 800MHz system bus. Each core will also have 1MB of cache, less than the 2MB of cache found on a single-core chip's computing core. Still, the overall performance will be better than existing chips, Intel says, and will allow PC users to fluidly run two applications at once.

The chip will also contain HyperThreading, which allows the processing cores to take on more simultaneous tasks. A scaled-down version of Smithfield without HyperThreading will arrive later in the quarter.

AMD, though, still has a few days to spoil the party. In 2000, Intel secretly moved up the release date of its first 1GHz chip from around June to 8 March. After the news broke, AMD moved the date of its first 1GHz chip up a few months to 6 March.

Intel's dual-core release will come the day before the fortieth anniversary of Moore's Law, the famed observation that the number of transistors on a chip can double every two years.

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendlyPrint with EPSON

Did you find this article useful?
53 out of 125 people found this useful


Full Talkback thread

0 comments

Company/Topic Alerts

Create a new alert from the list below:








Video icon

Video

Microsoft Futures

Windows 7: Mixed reviews from PDC attendees

As developers received their copies of Windows 7 on Tuesday, they offered varied reactions to the Microsoft operating system update More

Microsoft floats clouds on Windows Azure

At the Professional Developers Conference, Microsoft announced the Azure Services Platform, the company's cloud-computing platform More

Ozzie: Success of Azure comes down to trust

In an interview, Ray Ozzie says businesses will be taking a risk by placing core operations in Microsoft's datacentre, but that the software giant has more to lose if things go bad More


Skip Sub Navigation Links to CNET Brand Links

Help

Become part of the ZDNet community.

Newsletters