Two big names

Published: 15 May 2001 y., Tuesday
On Saturday, May 12, the TV pitchpeople were first to offer Compaq Presario 1200 series laptop computers featuring AMD’s new Athlon 4 processor. The Athlon 4 joins AMD’s equally new mobile Duron CPU in a double-barreled assault on the notebook PC market, currently dominated by Intel Corp. (with some skirmishing by Transmeta’s Crusoe chip). Both the mobile Duron and Athlon 4 feature AMD’s PowerNow technology, which AMD says “blasts past the competition’s battery power management implementation” by delivering up to 30 percent longer battery life and up to 50 percent more performance than Intel’s SpeedStep scheme. A Windows control panel lets users switch among three operating modes: In “high performance” mode, the CPU always run at maximum performance; in “battery saver” mode, the CPU always runs in its lowest power state; and in “automatic” mode, the system determines the appropriate level of power and performance based on application demand. The mobile Athlon 4 features 384K of on-chip, full-speed cache (128K Level 1 and 256K Level 2 cache) with hardware data prefetch, a superscalar floating-point unit, and support for AMD’s 3DNow Professional instructions and 200MHz AMD Athlon front-side bus. It’s available in 850MHz ($240), 900MHz ($270), 950MHz ($350), and 1GHz ($425) speeds (all prices in 1,000-unit OEM quantities). Aimed at value-conscious business and home laptop buyers, AMD’s mobile Duron processor features 192K of total on-chip cache and data prefetch, along with 3D Now Professional and 200MHz front-side bus support. It’s offered in 800MHz ($170) and 850MHz ($197) flavors. Like the Athlon 4, the mobile Duron is compatible with AMD's venerable Socket A infrastructure. While Compaq, which will offer 1GHz Athlon 4 Presario 1200 notebooks immediately through its Web site and retail kiosks, is the first PC vendor to sign up, AMD’s press release for the new CPUs also contains a thumbs-up quote from a Hewlett-Packard mobile computing marketing director, so it seems likely that at least two big names are ready to put an Athlon in your lap.
Šaltinis: hardwarecentral.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Symantec Offers SMBs a Better Sense of Security

Firewalls, VPNs, intrusion detection are becoming as common in the business vernacular as balance sheets, P & L statements and chart of accounts more »

IBM To Bulk Up On-Demand Centers

IBM is set to make a major push in its drive to become the top provider of utility, or "on-demand," computing services more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

CeBIT'2004: Talking technology

Talkative future for every gadget more »

The accusation

Internet suppliers have to connect abroad in order to connect with Poland more »

Panasonic preps 1GB Secure Digital card

Panasonic announced on Friday that it plans to launch a 1GB Secure Digital card first in Japan in April more »

Who should govern the Net?

It's no longer merely an academic question more »

NEC shrinks music, grows phones

NEC has launched the e616, its latest feature-packed 3G handset at CeBIT more »

Sony doubles up with AIT-4

Sony has launched the fourth generation of its AIT (Advanced Intelligent Tape) format at CeBIT more »

ICANN surveys proposed Net domains

The Internet's real estate may soon be expanding, with the proposed addition of up to nine new top-level domains, including .jobs, .xxx, .travel and .mail more »