By Staff
Thursday, October 13 2005 11:19 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/hardware/0,39042972,39277979,00.htm
Figuring out which computer to buy will be a lot more challenging next
year with the substantial expansion of Intel's processor line.
A confidential Intel road map seen by CNET News.com reveals that the Santa
Clara, Calif.-based chipmaker will market a dizzying hodgepodge of chips in
2006. Some will have two cores, or computer brains, on a single piece of
silicon, while others will have one core.
Performance-enhancing features such as hyperthreading, 64-bit functionality, execute/disable and virtualization will
appear together, separately, in varying combinations or not at all, depending on
the chip and the type of computer in which it will be used. Of course, chips
will vary by speed, cache size and bus speed.
Intel's first round of Viiv entertainment-branded PCs will be included on Intel motherboards code-named Bad Axe, Palm Canyon and Bear Canyon. Each motherboard will include LGA775 packaging for 3.60GHz and higher processor frequencies. These computers will
rely on the upcoming Yonah
notebook chip. Intel declined to comment.
Ultimately, Intel's future Pentium 4 line can be broken into two families: Presler
chips, which are due in the first part of 2006 and Conroe
desktop processors, which are due in the second half of 2006. Both dual-core
processors will be based around an 800MHz front-side bus, which helps speed the
chip's complex computations.
Presler, the successor to Smithfield, features two physically separate Cedar
Mill processor cores in a single package. The chipsets accompanying Presler will
feature EM64T (64-bit translation capabilities); virtualization that juggles
multiple tasks by dividing them into separate regions for personal, work and
administrative uses; enhanced speed step to help power up and down the processor
cycles; LaGrande
security system; and execute/disable, or XD technologies, which were
designed to work with operating systems like Microsoft Vista to neuter virus and
Trojan threats.
Intel motherboards based on Presler and its corresponding 945P and 945G
chipsets include code names such as Radio Springs, Palm Canyon and Marblewood.
Pricing stays constant
Two PC platforms, or blueprints, are being
prepped for Conroe: Averill, for corporate computers, and Bridge Creek, for home
computers. Conroe is part of Intel's
next-generation, low-power micro-architecture, which includes Merom for
notebooks and Woodcrest for servers.
While the document indicates that Presler is expected to include separate
cache memory components, Conroe will sport 2MB and 4MB high-speed unified cache
memory, the document said.
Intel motherboards in this category are based mainly on the Broadwater
chipset and are expected to be released in the second half of 2006. Boards
include such code names as Lemont, Wescott, Coupeville, Guardfish, Westchester,
Shrewsbury, Marble Springs, Stoughton, Mequon, Pelzer and Rogers City.
While the consumer lines are expected to fluctuate, Intel's business
processors are locked in for at least a 12-month period to help corporations
better plan.
Another anticipated trend, according to the internal document, is that
hyperthreading, one of the touted features of the Pentium 4, will not be part of
Conroe, although Intel is making the technology available in some of its
chipsets for single-core processors. Hyperthreading speeds up a chip's
performance because it processes two software threads on one semiconductor core,
Intel has said.
Intel is expected to launch four new Celeron processors--410, 420, 430 and a
low-voltage 423--in the next 18 months. It marks the first time the less
expensive chip will be built using 65-nanometer technology.
The chips will include a faster front-side bus to 533MHz--up from 400MHz on
previous versions built on the new Yonah processor architecture.
One constant, however, is pricing. The new desktop and notebook chips will
sell within the same range as today's chips. When a pricing pyramid stays the
same, it traditionally indicates that a company feels somewhat confident about
its current position over rivals, as Intel may with AMD.
Intel's highest-priced desktop chips, the Pentium Extreme Edition, will still
be priced at US$999 in bulk quantities. Two of the chips--PPXE 955 and P4PXE
9xx--will launch in January 2006 and are expected to reach speeds as high as
3.73GHz. The chips will also include a front-side bus architecture as fast as
1066MHz, according to the internal document. The majority of Pentium
processors--from the PDP 950 to the PDP 820--will start at US$637 and meander
through various clock and bus connection speeds to the low end of the spectrum,
which is around US$163.
Value-priced chips, such as Intel's Celeron family, will range in price from
US$117 to US$69.
Kai Schmerer of ZDNet Germany reported from Munich.