Options
Intel Tejas delayed until 2005
<b>Does anyone else think Valve started a trend??</b>
[blockquote]"Intel's 'Tejas' processor, the successor to the as-yet-unreleased 'Prescott', will now not be released until 2005 rather than late next year. However, the 130nm Northwood core Pentium 4 won't last as long as previously planned.
So claims site PC Watch on the back of recent Intel roadmaps it has seen.
The shift is a result of the 90nm Prescott being moved back from Q4 2003 to Q1 2004. Last August, Intel was saying 3.2GHz and 3.4GHz Prescotts would be shipping in volume in the current quarter. At least one of those parts will ship before the end of the year, enough for Intel to claim a revenue gain, but almost certainly not in the volumes the company originally had in mind.
Instead, we get the 130nm Pentium 4 Extreme Edition to cover the Prescott-shaped hole in the Q4 2003 segment of Intel's roadmap. The 3.2GHz and 3.4GHz Prescotts now appear in Q1 2004, alongside the 2.8GHz and 3GHz versions of the chip. The latter two had always been scheduled for a Q1 release. But if they have not been delayed, other top-clocked Prescotts have, with the 3.6GHz, 3.8GHz and 4GHz versions each falling back one quarter....."[/blockquote]
<a href="http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/3/33350.html" target="_new">Read more of the all too familiar "delay of blah" @ The Register</a>
[blockquote]"Intel's 'Tejas' processor, the successor to the as-yet-unreleased 'Prescott', will now not be released until 2005 rather than late next year. However, the 130nm Northwood core Pentium 4 won't last as long as previously planned.
So claims site PC Watch on the back of recent Intel roadmaps it has seen.
The shift is a result of the 90nm Prescott being moved back from Q4 2003 to Q1 2004. Last August, Intel was saying 3.2GHz and 3.4GHz Prescotts would be shipping in volume in the current quarter. At least one of those parts will ship before the end of the year, enough for Intel to claim a revenue gain, but almost certainly not in the volumes the company originally had in mind.
Instead, we get the 130nm Pentium 4 Extreme Edition to cover the Prescott-shaped hole in the Q4 2003 segment of Intel's roadmap. The 3.2GHz and 3.4GHz Prescotts now appear in Q1 2004, alongside the 2.8GHz and 3GHz versions of the chip. The latter two had always been scheduled for a Q1 release. But if they have not been delayed, other top-clocked Prescotts have, with the 3.6GHz, 3.8GHz and 4GHz versions each falling back one quarter....."[/blockquote]
<a href="http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/3/33350.html" target="_new">Read more of the all too familiar "delay of blah" @ The Register</a>
0
Comments
Mister Intel and their 7GHz chip on .000003u processing with double-stacking 64bit using 100000gigabit ram on particleboard interconnects with 70000 megawatt cpu cooler generator combo and Hyperthreading CMXIIVI.