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Showing posts with label Paul Otellini. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paul Otellini. Show all posts

Intel CEO Paul Otellini : Windows 8 tablets 'being queued up' for production

Description :
Windows 8, Microsoft’s next-generation platform, is expected to become commercially available this fall, and devices to run under it are already being developed. 
We’re referring here to tablet PCs, of course, since Windows 8 is the first Microsoft client to feature optimizations for this type of devices. We already assumed that Microsoft and its partners were working on tablet PCs to be launched when Windows 8 was made available, but no specific confirmation on this has emerged before. 
Intel CEO Paul Otellini hinted that Windows 8 tablet production may not be that far off (are already in the pipeline - PCMag reports), while asserting that Android tablets won't be able to compete against the iPad until Ice Cream Sandwich becomes more widespread. 


In an earnings conference call after the chip giant posted better than expected earnings today, Otellini said Android-based tablets don't have what it takes to compete against the iPad - yet.
"Tablets are a little bit about hardware and an awful lot about software," he said. "Until you get to Ice Cream Sandwich, the offering isn't as powerful as with what's out there with Apple. As Ice Cream Sandwich tablets start shipping, you'll begin to see a little bit better receptivity...everything got a little bit better with ICS," he said, referring to Android 4.0.


Then he made an interesting comment about Windows 8 tablets and production schedules. "The other part of that test [of competing with iPad] of course is the Windows 8 tablets that are being queued up for production," he said.


He also repeated a theme addressed back in November at an Intel conference about the fungibility of ultrabooks and tablets. "I don't know that the whole tablet thing is settled down by any stretch. These hybrid and convertible designs...there is a significant blurring of what people do with tablets and what people do with PCs," he said.


"Many of those [ultrabooks] will incorporate touch. At that point, it's hard to tell what the market impact will be because the PC now has the characteristics of both tablets and high-performance notebooks. I [don't think] we know how that plays out," he said.
Intel, of course, believes it will be in a good position to finally penetrate the tablet market as the world's premier chip manufacturer. "With the silicon integration capability we have...to be able to drive the bill of materials cost down and integration up in the tablet space which I think is going to be a sweet spot for Intel," he said.


Otellini also reiterated that the goal is to exit the year with 40 percent of consumer notebooks being ultrabooks.

*by andreascy*

Intel Haswell Microarchitecture 22nm CPU

Decription :

At IDF, Intel demonstrated a chip that will come after Ivy Bridge, the next "tick" in Intel's release schedule. That chip is codenamed Haswell, and it will bring architectural improvements to the 22 nm process that will first be introduced in Ivy Bridge.


Intel sees Haswell as the goal for its multi - phase Ultrabook initiative. Looking into its future plan for the platform, Intel CEO Paul Otellini described a new class of platform power management in development for the 2013 Haswell products for Ultrabooks.

Intel said that advances in silicon technology and platform engineering are expected to reduce idle platform power by more than 20 times over current designs without compromising computing performance. Otellini said he expects that this design change, combined with industry collaboration, will lead to more than 10 days of connected standby battery life by the time the products hit in 2013. Bold words, but we're looking forward to it.

The connected standby battery life means that notebooks could operate like today's smartphones, which can be in a sleep mode but still stay connected, keeping the email, social media and digital content up-to-date.


I am very interested to see how this power savings technology will play into a One2One computing environment such as the one I work in. Batteries and battery life balanced with weight is the one thing we always seem to have an issue with especially as machines go into their 2nd and 3rd year of the lease cycle we use.

*by andreascy*

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