Intel on Monday is expected to launch its latest mobile platform, Centrino 2, which will deliver speedier performance and faster wireless connectivity to laptops.
After multiple refreshes, the new platform is Intel's first major Centrino upgrade after its predecessor was launched in 2003. The new platform will deliver better performance on laptops with faster, more power-efficient Core 2 Duo chips running between 2.26GHz and 3.06GHz.
It will also include support for 802.11n wireless networking and WiMax wireless broadband, which will allow laptop users to connect wirelessly with record speed and range, said Elvin Ong, an Intel spokesman, in a blog entry.
The platform will include Penryn chips manufactured using the 45-nanometer process, with three of the new processors running at 25 watts for better power-efficiency compared to 35 watts in earlier Centrino notebook processors, Ong wrote.
A big Centrino 2 advantage is improved graphics, said Nathan Brookwood, principal analyst at Insight 64. The new GM45 integrated graphics card supports DirectX 10 to handle 3D graphics and high-definition content. It also is capable of off-loading the processor by taking on heavier graphics loads.
"You have enough power ... to watch a Blu-ray movie before the battery dies. If you had Blu-ray in previous notebooks, the battery would give out before the movie got interesting," Brookwood said.
The improved graphics chipset also is more competitive with that from Advanced Micro Devices, whose integrated graphics technology in the Puma notebook platform raised the bar in handling high-definition content. "Integrated graphics has never been Intel's strong point in the notebook [space]. They are committed to eliminating graphics as a source of competitive weakness," Brookwood said.
Multiple vendors are expected to announce Centrino 2 laptops next week. However many are already in the wild, with European vendor Santech offering the X46 laptop, with Core 2 Duo chips, 4G bytes of RAM, a 15.4-inch display, WiMax capabilities and wireless A/G/N networking, priced starting at Euro 619 (AUD$1116).
Earlier this year Pioneer Computers, an Australian PC maker, became one of the earliest to offer Centrino 2 chips in its configurable DreamBook Style 9008 laptop with Core 2 Duo processors, a 15.4-inch screen and up to 4G bytes of RAM starting at A$1,399.
Beyond Centrino 2, Intel has new products on the horizon that reduce chip size and consume less power. In 2007, Intel talked about shrinking the normal chip size by up to 60 percent for the Centrino 2 platform. Intel officials declined comment on whether it is launching smaller chips next week.
The company earlier this year announced it was working on a platform code-named Calpella, the successor to Centrino 2, which is due for release next year.
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Comments
Why should we care?
The Penryn mobile chip is ALREADY shipping..... "N" wireless is ALREADY available on notebooks, and Intel notebooks won't even be available with Intel integrated graphics. With some 80% of the notebook market with integrated graphics, they better be good, and Intel's reportedly arent. Check this out:
Intel and Vista "barely works": http://forum.tabletpcreview.com/showthread.php?t=14899
Intel and Sims 2 "underpowered": http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/aug2007/tc2007081_108723....
So why again should we care about this launch?