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Earlier today AMD’s director of global business units marketing, John Taylor, joined us on our CES stage to talk chips. Specifically, tablet chips, and laptop chips, and chips for products that have elements of both. While he was up there, Mr. Taylor flashed a reference device — a laptop hybrid with the keyboard and touchpad built into the carrying case. Obviously, we weren’t satisfied with just a quick tease, so we caught up with him afterward to learn a bit more. As it turns out, it runs a quad-core version of AMD’s new Temash chip, which is being billed as the first quad-core, x86-based SoC. (There’s also a dual-core version.) Built into the chip is an HD Radeon 8000 series GPU with AMD’s Graphics Core Next architecture, so in theory you should be able to pull off PC-caliber gaming even on a tablet.
All told, it promises 50 percent more performance than AMD’s Hondo processor, which you can find in Vizio’s new Windows 8 tablet. Of course, those are just marketing claims, and besides we haven’t had a chance to benchmark either a Hondo or a Temash system yet. So, to put that in better context, it might be helpful to hear AMD talk about its competitors. Obviously, Intel is a biggie, but in particular AMD says Temash should be able to compete with Clover Trail tablet chips, going all the way up to Core i3 on laptops. We’re told Temash will ship sometime in the first half of this year, and that AMD will be revealing more details about the platform at Mobile World Congress, which kicks off in late February. Until then, we’ve got hands-on photos of the unit below, along with some performance impressions after the break.
Gallery: AMD Temash hands-on
Continue reading AMD shows off a reference device with a quad-core, x86-based Temash chip
Meet ‘North Cape,’ Intel’s reference laptop with a detachable 1080p screen, Haswell CPU
Posted in: Today's ChiliIf you weren’t following along with Intel’s CES 2013 keynote, here’s a partial summary: among other things, the company debuted its fourth-generation Core processors, which until now have gone by the codename “Haswell.” In addition to talking speeds and feeds, though, Intel also showed off a reference laptop with a Haswell chip inside, a notebook called “North Cape.” It was a hybrid, essentially — a 13-inch, 1080p tablet with a keyboard dock. (Intel made it sound more exciting than it was, saying the CPU is behind the display and that there are batteries behind the display and under the keyboard.) In any case, we got to see it up close after the press conference wrapped, though Intel isn’t actually letting members of the media touch it yet.
So far, we don’t know much about the device (Intel won’t even disclose battery life estimates) but we can say it looks thin for a 13-inch touchscreen device (the official spec is 10mm thick for just the tablet and 17mm for the tablet and dock). The viewing angles look promising, too, as you can hopefully tell from those odd camera angles. No word yet on which PC maker is going to pick up this design, but an Intel rep staffing the press conference told us it should arrive in time for the back to school shopping season, which usually kicks off in late spring. So when you see something similar to this surface in the May timeframe, just remember: you saw it here first.
Myriam Joire contributed to this report.