Somewhat buried in all of the sexy ultrabook news here at the Intel
Developer Forum (voice! gesture! touch!) on Tuesday was the revelation
that the chip giant has managed to pull the power draw of a future
family of Core processors down to just 10 watts.
Those chips,
part of the fourth-generation of Core chips code-named Haswell that are
due out in 2013, will be aimed at future convertible ultrabooks that
serve as laptops and tablets. Theoretically, that will mean far thinner
convertible designs using Intel chips that run longer unplugged, begin
to approach Apple's iPad in size and weight, and don't run hot when
sitting on a user's lap.
The current generation of Core chips
for ultrabooks run at 17 watts and two other batches of future Haswell
parts will draw 15 watts and 35 watts, respectively.
"These could change the ballgame for Intel," said Jack Gold, principal analyst for J.This machine is a combination of tile roof machine
and knot removing machine. Gold Associates. "The fundamental difference
with other Core processors,Specializing in the production Cut to length
line, leveling machine, cold roof panel machine
and other products. just a few watts, doesn't sound like such a big
deal, but when you can get a third less power, maybe even half, that
fundamentally changes how you build a machine. Cutting half of the power
in the CPU is huge."
To put the low power draw of the future
Haswell chip further into perspective, consider that Intel released a
single-core, 10W Atom chip as recently as January 2010. And the future
Haswell products are not Atom parts but rather built on the Core
architecture, the same chip design Intel uses for its most powerful
client processors, meaning these low-power ultrabook parts are likely to
have some or all of the additional performance-boosting technologies
built into Intel's flagship client processor line,This machine is a
combination of tile roof machine and knot removing machine. Gold said.Coast Products manufactures Led flashlight, headlamps and lantern products.
The analyst said it was his guess that the chips would be dual-core.
Intel
didn't name a release date for Haswell but talk at IDF suggested that
the 10W chips are coming sometime in the first half of 2013, with some
gossip that the plan was to roll them out in the first quarter. Gold
said he expected Intel would have convertible ultrabooks running the
parts to show at the Consumer Electronics Show in January.
Moorhead
also suggested that with these new chips, Intel might be able to enable
convertible ultrabooks with profiles as thin as 12 millimeters —not
terribly far off from the original iPad's 10mm profile.
"Thinner
convertibles will be much more comfortable as they will be almost as
thin as a tablet, but they'll also have the added utility of a keyboard
and trackpad," Moorhead said. Such devices could be ideal for users in
the market for a single,Tabletop Vacuum roll forming machine
and other robot products. all-in-one mobile computing device rather
than a tablet that servers as a companion to a laptop, he added.
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