Intel's first system-on-a-chip designed around the x86 instruction set is ready for the world.
The company is planning to announce the chips, coined EP80579, Thursday for its customers building storage and networking equipment. The chips themselves are not the most exciting products Intel has ever released, but they are the first step in the company's new strategy for making small power-efficient products that have all the components you need on a single chip.
Intel has made so-called SoCs before during its days with the XScale architecture, but after ditching that division in 2006 it reorganized its embedded and mobile efforts around the Atom processor, a low-power chip that can run all the same software as a regular Core 2 Duo chip.
The company's pitch for the mobile computing and embedded market is just that--that its x86-based SoCs will be able to take advantage of a host of existing software and that developers will be able to more easily create software for those devices using familiar tools. The EP80579 family is based on a Pentium M design, the forerunner to the Core Duo chips.
Later this year, Intel plans to introduce Canmore for home entertainment boxes, and sometime late next year or early in 2010 it intends to release Moorestown, an SoC that might allow the company to break into the smartphone market. The Atom processor out in the market right now is not a true SoC because it does not have all the components like a memory controller, graphics system, and other important hardware units integrated into the chip.
This article was first published as a blog on CNET News.com.











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