Tag Archives: Ivy Bridge

Intel Is Helpless

By Evan Niu, CFA, The Motley Fool

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Following the gloomy estimates out of market researcher IDC on the sad state of the PC market in the first quarter, Intel shares dropped by as much as 3%, since the bulk of Chipzilla’s business is still tied directly to the PC market.

Bulls will point to the company’s upcoming line of chips based on its Haswell architecture as a possible catalyst to reinvigorate growth. Intel’s latest and greatest silicon is expected to offer modest CPU performance gains of 5% to 15% (assuming same clock speed as the previous-generation Ivy Bridge) and more impressive integrated GPU performance improvements of 30% to 50%, all while improving power efficiency and battery life. CEO Paul Otellini recently said that Haswell would offer “the single largest generation-to-generation battery life improvement” in the company’s history.

The problem? None of that matters.

Of course performance increases every year. That’s a given. There’s no doubt that Intel continues to create the most powerful consumer microprocessors known to man. When it comes to manufacturing prowess, the company remains unrivaled. But those aren’t the types of things that will sway the average consumer in the market for a computing device, who is increasingly switching to smartphones and tablets.

In some ways, Intel is facing performance oversupply. Most of that raw power likely isn’t being tapped by casual users anyway, so consumers are turning their attention to lower-cost mobile devices where Intel still has no traction. Intel’s fate remains inextricably linked to Microsoft‘s , and Windows 8 is absolutely bombing with the average user. Having a cutting-edge processor does no good if a consumer hates the interface.

J.P. Morgan analyst Mark Moskowitz concurs. He believes that though Haswell may spur some demand within the Ultrabooks, it won’t be enough to offset the broader declines that the PC industry is facing. Of particular concern were shipments in the Asia-Pacific region. Units fell 13% there, which is the first double-digit decline posted in that geography. Moskowitz also thinks that OEMs will start looking for price breaks amid soft demand.

Haswell is more of a threat to NVIDIA than anything else, primarily at the low end of the discrete GPU market. NVIDIA has held up admirably to the threat of integrated graphics, and its high-end discrete GPUs will always blow integrated solutions out of the water.

Last year, NVIDIA investor relations exec Rob Csongor emphasized to me that investors should focus more on the difference between integrated performance and discrete performance, since that difference is where NVIDIA conveys its value proposition to gamers and enthusiasts. With Haswell, that difference will get smaller.

Despite Intel‘s attempts to crack mobile, it still has little to nothing to show for it. Within the PC market that Intel still leans on (63% of revenue last quarter), Intel is helpless.

When it comes to dominating markets, it doesn’t get much better than Intel’s position in the PC microprocessor arena. However, that market is maturing, and Intel finds itself in

From: http://www.dailyfinance.com/2013/04/11/intel-is-helpless/

Intel brings Haswell to servers with Xeon E3 chip

Intel announced new server chips on Tuesday, including the latest Xeon E3, which is the first server processor based on the company’s latest Haswell microarchitecture.

Intel’s Xeon E3 chips are targeted at low-end servers and microservers, which are an emerging category of dense servers largely aimed at Web hosting and cloud implementations. Microservers usually have lower-power processors and are designed to handle large volumes of lightweight web or cloud transactions, like search queries and social networking page renderings.

The E3 chips will have up to four cores and receive a performance and power-efficiency boost with Haswell. Most of Intel’s chips are currently based on the Ivy Bridge microarchitecture, and Haswell will be the basis for the upcoming fourth-generation Core processors, which will be in laptop and desktops this quarter.

Intel also announced the faster Xeon E5 and E7 chips, which are based on Ivy Bridge. The E5 chip is for mid-range servers and will come with up to eight cores, while the E7 chip is targeted at high-end servers and will have up to 10 CPU cores.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld

Cheap Tech: Alienware X51, Galaxy S3, SWOTR Headset, and More!

Technology is constantly evolving, but you don’t have to spend a fortune to keep up with the latest and greatest products. The internet yields many fruits, not the least of which is deep cuts on otherwise expensive hardware. To help aid your search, we’ve rounded up the best deals of the week, including smartphones, compact gaming PCs, gaming headsets, and more!

Plenty of people are waiting to hear about the future of PC gaming from the couch, thanks to Valve’s upcoming Steam Box. But playing games on Steam while chilling in your favorite recliner is something you can do right now. The Alienware X51 is a mini gaming rig, perfect for setting up on your TV stand or entertainment center. A 3.4GHz Intel Core i7 quad-core Ivy Bridge processor is backed up by 8GB of RAM. Plus, you’ll have plenty of storage space for all those PC games with a 2TB SATA III HDD. While plenty of smaller rigs – or even larger game rigs, honestly – are dropping optical discs drives, the Alienware X51 includes Blu-ray, meaning it can double as a media machine in the family room. The very competent GeForce GTX 660 with 1.5GB memory completes this pint-sized package. You can get your own, right now, for only $999 (a savings of $350).

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at IGN Tech

Intel's new Ivy Bridge parts form a budget line

(Phys.org)—News from Intel on Ivy Bridge microarchitecture involves the rollout of eight new SKUs (processor unique identifier part numbers) to Celeron and Pentium families as well as a new Core chip. Translation: Intel’s latest processors has now arrived at a budget-friendly line. With the release of pricing and specs for three Celeron family CPUS, G1610, G1610T and G1620, four Pentiums, G2010, G2020 and G2020T and G2130 and a new Core i3-3210, available now.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Phys.org