No surprise: Intel has known about Chrome OS, worked with Google on ‘elements’ of project

So as it turns out, Intel isn’t just casually accepting of Google’s new OS initiative, it’s actually been privy to the project for some time now, according to a spokesperson for the chipmaker. The two have apparently also worked together (and are potentially still working together) on portions of Chrome OS, he says, which really makes it all the more curious that the company isn’t mentioned among Google’s first partners while Qualcomm, Freescale, and Texas Instruments are. Then again, said inclusion might make the Moblin team more than a little bit upset, and either way, let’s not forget that Atom chips will be sold regardless of which OS is on the system — it’s really kind of a win-win situation that we reckon the hardware division isn’t complaining about.

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No surprise: Intel has known about Chrome OS, worked with Google on ‘elements’ of project originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 10 Jul 2009 18:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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ASUS U50VG announced, naming scheme remains impenetrable

Coming in today with no fewer than five new laptops — the U50VG, K50AB, K70AB, K50IJ and F52Q — the king of market segmentation is clearly still in good form. Announced in Italy today, the main attraction for Intel fans is the U50VG, which sports a 2.1GHz Core 2 Duo T6500 chip alongside 4GB of memory, 250GB storage, and a Geforce G 105M for a price of €943 or $1,320. A backlit chiclet keyboard, WiFi and a 16:9 display stretching to 15.6-inches fill out the spec sheet. The AMD-based AB variants are 15.6 (€793 / $1,107) and 17.3-inches (€868 / $1,212) respectively — their main attraction being an ATI Mobility Radeon HD4570 purring inside — whereas the latter two models are targeted at the budget-conscious crowd. Click through for exhaustive specs and info on each model.

[Via Slashgear]

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ASUS U50VG announced, naming scheme remains impenetrable originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 10 Jul 2009 10:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Acer’s 11.6-inch Aspire Timeline 1810T: a netbook we can finally embrace?

We’re doing our darnedest to keep our expectations in check, but it looks like the long, painful wait for a halfway potent netbook may be drawing to a close. With Windows 7 just months away, laptop makers are finally able to skirt around Microsoft’s Windows XP-netbook limitations in preparation for a better, more refined OS. The just-leaked Aspire Timeline 1810T, for example, shares the same chassis as the underpowered Aspire One 751, though the innards are similar to those found in the Timeline series. We’re talking an 11.6-inch display (1,366 x 768 resolution), Intel’s 1.4GHz ULV SU3500 processor, GMA 4500MHD graphics, hardware accelerated decoding of HD video, up to 4GB of RAM, an HDMI socket, gigabit Ethernet, WiFi, optional 3G / Bluetooth 2.1+EDR and an 8-hour battery. Naturally, this one is slated to ship with Vista Home Premium, but that free upgrade to Win7 makes said pill entirely easier to swallow. C’mon Acer — dish out the price and release date, won’tcha?

Continue reading Acer’s 11.6-inch Aspire Timeline 1810T: a netbook we can finally embrace?

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Acer’s 11.6-inch Aspire Timeline 1810T: a netbook we can finally embrace? originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 07 Jul 2009 09:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Why Intel’s Processors Aren’t Big on Cellphones

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Under the hood of most netbooks lies a tiny Intel Atom chip. Intel’s low-power processor has fast become the silicon of choice for tiny computers — but not cellphone makers. Until last week’s Nokia-Intel partnership, most handset makers showed almost no interest in the world’s biggest maker of PC processors.

Meanwhile, Intel rival ARM, whose chips are packaged and sold through companies such as Qualcomm, Samsung and Texas Instruments, has gained nearly 90 percent of the cellphone processor market.

“Traditionally cellphones have been designed on the ARM processor and it is not easy to change it,” says Jack Gold, principal analyst with consulting firm J. Gold Associates. “And cellphone makers don’t want to. ARM-based chips have a significant advantage over the current generation Atom processors for quite a few reasons.”

Intel is being held back in the mobile sphere by its inability to offer power consumption on par with ARM’s chips, say analysts. Add to that the notion that Atom is untested for mobile phones and the fact that many proprietary mobile-phone operating systems are not compatible with Intel’s x86 architecture, and it makes breaking into the cellphone market an uphill climb.

It’s not for want of trying. Over the past few years, Intel has tried to crack open the mobile market with the XScale technology, before selling it to Marvell in 2006. Last month, Intel said it will buy Wind River Systems, a company that creates software for embedded applications in small consumer electronics and cars.

Now Intel is betting that the next version of the Atom family, which it plans to release in early 2010, will further its plans to get into phones. Also, Intel’s partnership with Nokia could result in a new chipset architecture targeted at mobile devices, the two companies say, although they have not provided any details.

Intel says it is isn’t concerned about its lack of a mobile foothold in the market today. It’s looking to the future. The current generation of Atom processor was never meant to go on cellphones, says Pankaj Kedia, a director in Intel’s ultra mobility group. Instead the company is counting on ‘Moorestown,’ the next generation of Atom processor to please cellphone manufacturers.

“Atom today is not suitable for cellphones,” acknowledges Kedia. “But Moorestown will deliver the same level of performance as today’s Atom but with a 50x reduction in idle power and a 3x reduction in power when you are playing 720p video.”

Intel needs to grab a slice of the cellphone market as its traditional turf — PCs — shrinks. Research firm Gartner expects PC sales for 2009 to reach 257 million units worldwide, while 269.1 million cellphones were sold in the first quarter of 2009 alone.  Though smartphones, which require powerful processors, are still a small percentage of the overall phones market, it is a fast growing segment.

“There is no doubt that Intel wants to be in the cellphone business,” says Gold. “We are talking about a category where it can sell hundreds of millions of chips a year.”

Unlike PCs, where power management is important but not a deal-breaker, cellphones are all about the battery life. Though the latest smartphones offer advanced audio, video and picture capabilities, customers still expect long battery life from their phones.  And unlike in the PC business where Intel has to contend with just one big rival in the form of AMD, a number of companies have sprung up offering repackaged ARM processors.

The current ARM Cortex-A8 is shipping in the new PalmPre (using Texas Instruments OMAP 3430), the new iPhone 3GS (using Samsung’s version). Qualcomm’s SnapDragon chip also based on the Cortex-A8 instruction set has been announced in Toshiba’s new smartphone.

Independent benchmarks on ARM vs. Atom power consumption are hard to come by. Both Intel and ARM use their own marketing spin to prove one is superior to the other, depending on whose brochure you are reading at the moment.

But analysts are clear that ARM right now ranks much well ahead of Intel Atom.

Consider these numbers for a moment (from ARM). For a 1000 mAH battery, the Intel Atom Z500 Atom processor running at 800 MHz offers 19 hours of sleep time and overall battery life of 7 hours. An ARM Cortex-A8 at 800 MHz offers weeks of sleep time and 6.9 days of average battery life — an order of magnitude greater..

“Of course Intel will argue that this is based on the current N270 Atom, not Moorestown,” says  Will Strauss, principal analyst at market research firm Forward Concepts. “And ARM will respond with ‘by the time Moorestown rolls out, we’ll have clients shipping Cortex-A9 based processors, and they will be even more lower-power’,” says Strauss.

Details about the upcoming platform’s power consumption and management capabilities are scarce. Intel has said the Moorestown platform consumes up to 10 percent lower less idle power compared to current Atom based processors. But there’s not enough detail to satisfy analysts.

“We don’t have a sample of Moorestown,” says Strauss. “All we have are Intel’s statements that keep changing and are rather hazy around the details.”

Even if Intel can deliver a successful cellphone chip in Moorestown, finding a foothold in the cellphone market won’t be easy, says Strauss. “A lot of the cellphone OS and software is not ported on to x86,” he says. “Doing that will take time and commitment from handset manufacturers.”

Strauss estimates it could take up to two years to get handset makers get their OS operating systems compatible with Atom. Intel says handset manufacturers may never have to, since it is working on Moblin, a new operating system targeted at pocket-sized devices.

“We don’t think today’s phone operating systems are the right ones,” says Kedia. “They were written for voice phones, not for next generation smartphones and that’s our pitch with Moblin.”

It’s an extremely ambitious goal and for now the odds are not in Intel’s favor.  “If they ship a chip for cellphones next year, it won’t be substantial,” says Strauss.

See Also:

Photo: Atom processor/Intel


Packard Bell imedia lineup gets an Acer-inspired refresh

Packard Bell recently overhauled its logo in an effort to keep up with the times, but are its offerings up to the same task? The new imedia lineup immediately recalls the recently announced M-series desktops from Acer, and that’s no accident. The innards are remarkably similar too, with the top models sporting Core 2 Quad or AMD Phenom II X4 processors, a 1.5GB GeForce GT230, HDMI out, Blu-Ray combo drive and a maximum of 8GB DDR3 memory and 1TB of storage. While none of the specs are on the blistering edge of innovation, there’s plenty of power there and keen pricing could make them an attractive proposition. The entry-level Celeron-based units start at £299 ($490) in the UK.

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Packard Bell imedia lineup gets an Acer-inspired refresh originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 03 Jul 2009 04:47:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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AMD’s RS880 integrated graphics chip could make netbooks usable

Tired of hearing that your next favorite netbook / nettop is hamstrung with one of those woefully underpowered GMA950 graphics chipsets? Eager to see what all AMD is going to do about it? If The Inquirer is to be believed, an up and coming integrated chipset should elevate the multimedia prowess of low-end machines, as the RS880 would actually be based around the new Radeon HD 4200 core. In theory, at least, this chip would be around 15 percent faster than similar alternatives out there now, giving future netbooks just enough power to churn through 720p video without st, st, stuttering. Needless to say, the suits are refusing to comment on the matter, but we’re definitely holding out hope for this one.

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AMD’s RS880 integrated graphics chip could make netbooks usable originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 02 Jul 2009 08:52:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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eMachines intros ET1300-02, ET1810-01 and ET1810-03 desktop PCs

Just a few short weeks after eMachines outed its EL1300 line of SFF PCs, the company is hitting us up again with a new trio of full-size desktops. The ET1300-02, ET1810-01 and ET1810-03 are all encased within a luminous white mini-tower and ship with a matching LCD monitor, speakers and a keyboard. As for specs, the $449.99 ET1300-02 checks in with an AMD Athlon X2 4850e (2.5GHz) CPU, Vista Home Premium, NVIDIA’s GeForce G100 (512MB), 3GB of DDR2 memory, a 160GB hard drive, 18x SuperMulti DVD burner, multicard reader, HDMI / DVI / VGA outputs and an 18-inch E182H display. The $369.99 ET1810-03 steps to a 2.2GHz Pentium E2210 CPU, GeForce 7500 integrated graphics and just a single VGA port, while the $299.99 ET1810-01 cranks it down to a 1.6GHz Celeron 420 and 2GB of DDR2 RAM. The trio should be filtering out to respected retailers as we speak.

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eMachines intros ET1300-02, ET1810-01 and ET1810-03 desktop PCs originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 01 Jul 2009 10:47:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Micron’s smaller NAND chips mean more, faster flash memory in the same old enclosures

Micron's smaller NAND chips mean more, faster flash memory in the same old enclosuresNeed a little more proof that Intel’s got some fly SSDs about ready to roll? We have confirmation from Micron that it’s working on new and improved 34nm chips in capacities of 8, 16, and 32Gb. These lovelies are 17 percent smaller than the previous rainbow colored flash delights, and are faster too, offering 200Mb/s transfer speeds and when combined into an SSD, able to keep up with SATA 6Gb/s transfers. This press release confirms the chips will show up in flash memory from Lexar, but we’re guessing that official Intel announcement can’t be far off now.

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Micron’s smaller NAND chips mean more, faster flash memory in the same old enclosures originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 30 Jun 2009 07:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Dell working on iPod touch-esque Android MID, says WSJ

It’s no surprise that Dell’s been dipping its toes in Android-infested waters as of late, and now the Wall Street Journal‘s reasserting a previous claim from early April that the company’s hard at work on a MID powered by Google’s mobile OS platform. Multiple sources have reportedly likened it to a slightly larger iPod touch, while one went so far as to suggest a very tentative second half 2009 target release window, assuming the project doesn’t get 187’d before then. Despite its history with Intel and the chipmaker’s penchant for MIDs, the report pegs ARM as the processor of choice. As for how this jibes with rumors of Dell’s smartphone plans, that’s where things get interesting, as WSJ quotes a source who said Dell’s thinking about selling it through cell carriers like it’s currently doing with 3G-equipped netbooks. The article repeatedly calls it a MID — meaning a phone might still be in the cards, but given past whispers, it kind of makes you wonder.

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Dell working on iPod touch-esque Android MID, says WSJ originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 29 Jun 2009 16:17:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Intel’s 32nm Clarkdale CPUs moved up to Q4, a full year ahead of AMD?

It’s just a rumor, but DigiTimes has pretty decent sources within Taiwan’s motherboard industry. So what was a Q1 2010 mass production launch of Clarkdale CPUs is now rumored to be coming in Q4, notable as the first Intel CPU to use its new 32nm process technology with an integrated memory controller and graphics core built on a 45nm process. This jibes with what DailyTECH and others were reporting back in Feburary. DigiTimes adds that Intel expects Clarkdale CPUs to account for 10% of its total desktop CPU shipments in Q4 rising to 20% in Q1 2010. That means we should see the chips well before the holiday shopping season (near the October 22nd launch of Windows 7 makes sense) if true. As for AMD, well, last we heard they’re still looking to “ramp up” production in the middle of 2010 with mass production capabilities arriving around Q4. Yeah, we know.

Read — DigiTimes
Read — DailyTECH

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Intel’s 32nm Clarkdale CPUs moved up to Q4, a full year ahead of AMD? originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 29 Jun 2009 06:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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