More powerful laptops for niche markets are likely to follow the announcement
of Intel's first
Core 2
Extreme processors for mobiles, while the chip maker confirmed it expects to
introduce battery-friendly quad-core processors for laptops in 2008.
Intel's announcement covered a raft of new chips, including new dual-core and
quad-core chips for desktops. The Core 2 Extreme X7800, however, is the first
such processor it has developed for the laptop market. While it will appear
initially in games machines for consumers, Intel's Extreme chips also find their
way into workstation systems, especially those aimed at creative media
professionals.
One firm that uses Extreme chips in workstations is
Dell.
The company declined to comment on whether it will use the new chip in its
Precision
mobile workstation line, but has only recently unveiled its latest model
based on a desktop processor.
The new dual-core chip has the highest speed of Intel's laptop processors at
2.6GHz, but also has mobile-specific power-saving features that enable more
energy-efficient and higher-performing designs. It performs up to 28 percent
faster than the current
Core 2 Duo
T2600, according to Intel.
“Due to our innovative technology and design capabilities, we can offer
world-class, power-smart performance for the most demanding mobile users," said
Mooly Eden of Intel's Mobile Platforms Group.
The emphasis on performance with energy efficiency will continue next year,
with the introduction of laptop chips based on Intel's
45nm
Penryn technology. While Intel has already said it will refresh its current
dual-core mobile platform with Penryn, the firm has now confirmed it will ship
quad-core laptop chips.
It is unclear how these will trade off performance against battery life, and
so quad-core mobile chips are likely to be a niche product, as with the Extreme
processors. However, Ovum senior analyst Carl
Gressum argued that there is a place for such chips.
"Is there a willingness to pay for Intel's Extreme CPUs? Yes, however it is a
targeted, limited niche market. Architects or engineers that work on site, or at
a customer's premises, need a mobile power machine," Gressum said.
Steve Kleynhans, vice-president of platforms group at
Gartner, agreed. "For those users,
battery life isn’t their primary concern, as they will typically have wall
power available," he said, adding that for the rest of the market, battery life
is much more important.
Meanwhile, Intel rival AMD is gearing up to launch its first quad-core chips,
codenamed Barcelona. However, these will target workstations and servers. AMD's
forthcoming mobile platform, codenamed Puma and due mid-2008, will instead
feature a dual-core chip called Griffin, the firm's first processor designed
specifically for laptops.
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