Taiwanese chip manufacturer Via Technologies has released a new energy efficient CPU, the Via Nano, which will go head-to-head with Intel's latest mobile processor the Atom.
With AMD switching focus and Intel's Mobile Pentium III soon to be superseded by the Pentium 4, firms face difficult choices over which notebook platform to invest in next.
Intel on Wednesday officially launched Centrino, a group of chips designed specifically for wireless computing, which the company is betting will be a shot in the arm for the computing and communications industries.
Intel will unveil three versions of its low-power Pentium-M processor, formerly code-named Banias, in March this year as part of the Centrino package.
Intel will launch a line of new chips for mobile PCs that includes a low-cost Celeron running at more that 1GHz.
Intel has announced a new brand name for its next-generation mobile processor technology: Centrino.
Google's Andy Rubin talks nuts and bolts about the Linux-based phone software, the lessons of Sidekick, and the beauty of the iPhone.
In the world of processors, attention seems firmly focused on the fast-paced desktop and mobile markets. But that doesn't mean that there's nothing going on in server-land.
Mooly Eden, general manager of Intel's Mobile Platforms Group, sat down in San Francisco to explain why he thinks Intel's next-generation chips will blow the competition away.
He led the Pentium team, and had a major hand in Centrino... what's next for Anand Chandrasekher?
At IDF, Anand Chandrasekher talks about Moorestown, a chip that has been designed for the next generation smartphone market and is expected to hit the market before 2010.
Intel has announced a new brand name for its next-generation mobile processor technology: Centrino.
Intel's new desktop processor has received glowing reports from independent reviewers.
The increase in speed comes courtesy of a new 3.06GHz mobile Pentium 4 chip, which was introduced as part of a volley of new processors fired off by the chip giant.
Intel is quietly manufacturing a new Celeron processor that could determine the direction of its notebook processor line.
Chips in desktops and notebooks will start to go their separate ways in 2003 with the introduction of two new processor families that Intel will tout this week at its Developer Forum.
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