Merom to top 50% of Intel notebook processors in Q1 2007
Intel plans to raise the proportion of Merom to over 50% of its notebook processor shipments in the first quarter of 2007, making 64-bit dual-core models the mainstream in the notebook market, according to industry sources. Intel’s latest plan will reduce production of its Yonah processors in the fourth quarter, and by the end of the 2006, Yonah processors will only account for 30% of Intel’s notebook processor shipments, down from the current 50%, the sources revealed.
More here at DigiTimes.
China brought $9 billion in revenues for Motorola in 2005
- Matrox releases desktop management software for multi-monitor users
- "Nothing off the table" - Intel on job cuts
- HP's develops grain-sized memory chip
- Blizzard tests new World of Warcraft cross-realm battlegrounds
- Microsoft partners with Nortel to accelerate communications strategy
- ArenaNet offers public beta of new Guild Wars game
- Movielink to offer DVD burning - if Hollywood plays along
- Analysis: Khronos and OpenGL ARB merge
- Intel's flagship goes dual-core
TSMC and ARM announce power reduction on 65nm
- Pricing trend shows growing acceptance of DDR2
- Sharp eying 10G LCD production
- Notebook channel cautious amid Intel-AMD price war
- Fujitsu introduces Itanium 2 servers for Linux and Windows
- Infinium changes name to Phantom Entertainment
- Samsung's 8 GB Flash memory chips in production
- Sony's new camcorders record high-def to mini-DVDs and hard drive
- Microsoft buys Winternals
- PlayStation 3 production has already begun
Sponsored
See more
Latest news
Miscellaneous Previous news
Partners




