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July 11,
2001
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By Stephen Shankland
July 10, 2001
C/Net |
Intel has stopped shipping its top-end server chip because of
a bug that could cause servers to crash. Intel began
shipping the chip, the Pentium III Xeon with 2MB of high-speed
"cache" memory, in March. But about a month later, a company
that sells computers using the chip notified Intel that it
found a problem while testing the chip, Intel spokesman Bill
Kircos said Tuesday.
Intel was able to reproduce the problem but unable to patch
existing systems, Kircos said. Accordingly, the company
stopped shipping the chip in mid-April. |
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By Daniel Sorid
July 6, 2001
Reuters |
The profit warning from Advanced Micro Devices Inc. AMD is
overpowering hopes that microchip makers have begun to recover
from a major slump, with semiconductor stocks on Friday
retreating further. "If there is any doubt that the industry
was still deteriorating, it was dispelled this week," SG Cowen
analyst Drew Peck said.
By mid-day, AMD shares had lost nearly a quarter of their
value, falling $6.99, or 24 percent, to $21.65, while the
Philadelphia Stock Exchange semiconductor index lost about 7.9
percent to 570.72. |
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By Graeme Philipson
July 10, 2001
Fairfax IT |
Compaq has bowed to the inevitable and announced that it is
discontinuing its Alpha chip. All its future machines will be
based around Intel processors. The announcement further
reduces the number of microprocessor architectures and further
consolidates Intel's stranglehold on the market.
There are now only two other significant microprocessor
architectures: IBM's PowerPC and Sun's SPARC. Both are way
behind Intel in market share. |
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Truths...from the rumor mill |
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By Mike Magee
July 10, 2001
The Inquirer |
CHIP CYCLOPS Intel is alerting its distribution and dealership
channel to the server boxed motherboards it will release using
"Tualatin" .13 micron Pentium III microprocessors. But, for
the first time in living memory, La Intella does not appear to
be using its own chipset for the Pentium IIIs which come with
a useful 512K of on-die cache, according to documents we have
seen.
It does recommend third party chipsets for some
configurations, but we believe it is the first time we have
seen such parts being bundled in a boxed motherboard kit. |
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By Phil Trent
July 9, 2001
The Inquirer |
I DIDN'T want to believe it for the longest time, but AMD and
Intel are in a very nasty price war. AMD had a 27 per cent
stock hit Friday, and Intel has been hammered over the last
several months as well. This reminds me of when a broker
friend of mine asked me about hard drive stocks two or three
years ago. I told him that the hard drive companies were
lowering prices so fast that I wouldn't recommend them at all.
Today, ditto on the CPU industry. |
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By Mike Magee
July 9, 2001
The Inquirer |
INFLUENTIAL TAIWANESE wire Digitimes reports today that the
Intel Pentium 4 only accounted for 10 per cent of mobo
shipments - seemingly in the last three months or so --
although the article is a little unclear about which period it
is covering. Uncertainty about the move from socket 423 to
socket 478 is part of the reason, according to the piece.
It also reports that RDRAM prices are now below $7 and that
other mobo makers are now supporting the board, with Gigabyte
increasing its shipments from 14,000 mobos a month to over
30,000. |
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By John Lettice
July 9, 2001
The Register |
Sources in Silicon Valley claim Intel is facing a nightmare
glut of P4s, as cannier buyers hold off pending the arrival of
the i845 chipset and the associated cheaper memory. The i845,
due in the middle of this quarter, will initially allow you to
use PC133 rather than RDRAM, and considering the ramifications
of that one might speculate that the canniest of canny buyers
will simply hold off some more, and wait for DDR. According
to our sources, the P4 inventory could have a severe impact on
Intel's Q2 figures, due on 17th July. The i845 with PC133
support may have some impact after that, but tagging geriatric
PC133 SDRAM technology onto the P4 can't exactly be what the
designers of Intel's 'state of the art' had in mind. |
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By Mike Magee
July 11, 2001
The Inquirer |
ATTEMPTS BY A GROUP OF industry figures, engineers and others
to persuade AMD and Samsung to give the Alpha processor a
future have come to nothing, the INQUIRER has learned. An
initiative which hoped to persuade Samsung and AMD that the
Alpha technology could have a future and would offer real
competition against Intel's Itanic platform has failed to
generate any enthusiasm from the two companies.
The move was spearheaded by some very unhappy Compaq Alpha
engineers at the company and both AMD and Samsung were
informally approached just a few days after Michael Capellas,
CEO of Compaq, and Craig Barrett, CEO of Intel, announced
their deal on the technology. |
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July 9,
2001
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By Ian Fried
July 5, 2001
C/Net |
Chipmaker Advanced Micro Devices announced Thursday that
earnings and sales for the second quarter of 2001 will fall
far below estimates. The company said in a statement that
second-quarter net income would be 3 cents to 5 cents a share.
Analysts polled by earnings tracking company First Call had
forecast an average of 27 cents a share for AMD's fiscal
second quarter, with individual estimates ranging from 20
cents to 32 cents.
Second-quarter sales will be down approximately 17 percent
from first-quarter results of $1.19 billion, the company
added. AMD earlier had projected that second-quarter sales
would decline by as much as 10 percent. |
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By Margaret Kane
July 6, 2001
C/Net |
Shares of chipmaker Advanced Micro Devices plunged almost 17
percent in early trading, a day after the company said that
second-quarter sales would miss estimates by a wide margin.
Shares were off $4.79 to $23.85.
AMD said Thursday that second-quarter net income would be
between 3 cents and 5 cents a share, well below the 27 cents
per share predicted by First Call analysts. |
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July 5, 2001
Semiconductor Business News |
Continuing its rapid expansion into 300-mm wafer-processing
technologies, Intel Corp. here is reportedly planning to set
up another 300-mm fab, this time in Silicon Valley, according
to a new report from Prudential Securities Inc. The new
development fab could represent Intel's seventh 300-mm wafer
plant to date. Intel will not comment on the report, but an
e-mail newsletter from Prudential Securities said the chip
giant plans to convert its 200-mm R&D fab, located near its
headquarters in Santa Clara, into a 300-mm development center.
The "D2" facility has primarily served as a 0.18-micron R&D
fab, using 200-mm (8-inch) wafers. It is now expected to be
converted to 300-mm substrates for 0.13-micron technology
development by 2002, said the report issued on Thursday. |
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Truths...from the rumor mill |
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By Tony Smith
July 4, 2001
The Register |
Something "of great significance" to PC system builders is
going down at Intel - and the company is preparing to tell its
customers about it in just under two weeks' time, The Register
has learned. As yet, we don't know what said companies will
be told, but an Intel email leaked to us today talks about
"the changes" which, the email's author hints, will affect
Intel's processor roadmap.
The leaked email is a call for Intel customers to attend a
meeting in two weeks' time. Intel staff themselves will be
briefed about "the changes" late next week. |
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By Mike Magee
July 8, 2001
The Inquirer |
IT'S TIME we guess, to summarise our knowledge of Intel's
current mobile processor plans which barring force majeure is
set to occur on the 15th of July next, when its crafty little
copper .13 micron chips start creeping into X86 based
notebooks. It will have some top names lined up to launch
machines - Toshiba and Dell, of course, but also its new
friend CompaQ. |
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By Tony Smith
July 5, 2001
The Register |
Intel has revealed at last what it charges for its Itanic
processor, and like First Class tickets on the chip's
ocean-going namesake, it's not what you'd call cheap. For
example, a single 800MHz Itanium with 4MB of on-die L2 cache
will set you back a whopping $4227 if you buy a thousand of
the processors.
The cheapest Itanium, a 733MHz with 2MB of L2, costs $1177
in batches of 1000. |
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By Mike Magee
July 7, 2001
The Inquirer |
PC VENDORS HAVE painted the writing on the wall for their chip
suppliers Intel and AMD for over six months now - there are
few people buying high end PCs and the introduction of higher
speed increments is having little effect on demand. But even
though their PC customers have painted the words PEOPLE ARE
NOT BUYING NEW PCs in letters 10 metres high and in dayglow
orange, it seems that Intel and AMD are not listening.
Instead, the major players in the X86 market are engaged in
a deadly embrace, a little like two wasps might fight as the
hive collapses at the end of summer, each attempting to sting
each other to death. |
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By Tony Smith
July 4, 2001
The Register |
AMD has updated its processor roadmap, adding new chip lines
and delaying the introduction of some existing parts. The
most obvious delay is the upcoming desktop Athlon based on the
new Palomino core. Previously scheduled for early in the
second half of 2001, it now appears to be pegged for a mid-2H
launch, say late September.
That aligns it with the previous roadmap's release
timeframe for Morgan, the desktop Duron based on the same core
as the new Athlon. |
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By Mike Magee
July 8, 2001
The Inquirer |
RAMBUS has said it will unveil its next generation higher
bandwidth codenamed "Yellowstone" in September. At the same
time it is evident that the firm has not ceded its stake to
the desktop market, as it will announce further developments
at a forum it is holding in the same month.
Sponsors of the forum include Intel, Samsung, Toshiba and
Elpida, and Rambus said it will show plans to get bandwidth of
6.4GB/sec on RDRAM, and enhancements to RIMM modules which
will speed the things up to 9.6GB/sec. |