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December 21, 2009 12:00 AM

Intel Unveils New Atom Chips for Low-End PCs

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Intel on Monday unveiled its next-generation family of Atom microprocessors, adding three new chips and a new chipset to the line. The processors are aimed at low-end netbook portables as well as desktop PCs, Intel says, and all utilize a 45nm manufacturing process and integrate graphics processing capabilities and memory controllers directly into the processors, resulting in much better performance and reduced power consumption.

"The Intel Atom processor has fueled an entirely new category of computing over the last year and a half and we think the growth will continue," says Intel Corporate Vice President Mooly Eden. "We're excited to be delivering the next-generation Atom platform and working across the industry as we head into a second phase of growth, powering innovative new system designs with better performance, smaller footprints, and better battery life."

The new platform consists of one single core chip for netbooks, the Atom N450, and two desktop chips, the single core Atom D410 and the dual-core Atom D510; all run at 1.66 GHz. Additionally, Intel unveiled the new NM10 Express Chipset, which works with all of the new processors. The NM10 was previously code-named Pine Trail.

The biggest advance in the new Atom chips is the integration of graphics processing, which reduces the number of processing chips required in a low-end PC from 3 to 2. Intel says this advance results in a 60 percent reduction in the size of the platform footprint and a 20 percent improvement in average power consumption on netbooks. For desktop PCs, the platform footprint improves by 70 percent.

Next generation Atom-based chips will begin shipping in new PCs January 4, according to Intel. Expect to see a slew of netbooks and net-tops built around these chips at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas that week

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Comments
  • Joe
    3 years ago
    Dec 21, 2009

    Seriously, these are Snooze City. Integrated memory controller and weak graphics that still doesn't have HD capabilities, not to mention that the new Atom CPU's itself aren't scoring much higher than existing netbook models. The nettop dual-cores are scoring no better than the relatively weak Atom 330. Battery life may be a strong point, but at what cost? They talk about 10 hours of battery life, and yet Asus already does this on their existing netbooks with the lackluster N series CPU's.

    AMD has more going on right now. I want to see AMD improve their fab. They're doing 65nm chips still. Intel will continue to put their money on fab, but AMD is the one innovating. They have a netbook and thin-and-light platform called Congo. It's an Athlon Neo X2 dual-core CPU with Radeon 3200 integrated. Designed to work together. By one company. Intel will sell themselves out of the fuller-featured netbook market, and that's a shame.

    I can't wait to try one of these Athlon systems. AMD chips lately have been surprisingly good especially for the money. Intel doesn't have a ~$100 quad-core. Try twice that. Intel's own mainstream media motherboards are about $150CDN too. Asus-made AMD chipset boards designed for media use (785G chipset with Radeon HD 4200 onboard) are $100CDN. And Intel's have sh*tty onboard video!! Intel only offers VT on high-end CPU's making vPro an expensive selling point for businesses. AMD has VT across the board, putting XP Mode capable, Win 7 Pro 64-bit machines within reach for businesses looking for next-gen tech at low prices.

    Microsoft isn't the next 800lb gorilla, IBM look-alike - Intel is.

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