From: www.itworld.com
March 14, 2008 —
Taking advantage of dropping hardware prices, Intel
expects to plug its newest Atom chips into desktops that will be available later
this year from under US$200.
Intel expects an Atom chip, code-named Diamondville,
to be used in fanless desktop computers designed for basic tasks like surfing
the Internet or viewing standard-definition DVDs. The company expects the systems
to be priced in the $199 to $250 range.
The Atom chips do not have the processing power required for more intense computing
tasks like viewing high-definition DVDs, said Noury Al-Khaledy, general manager
of Intel's Atom desktops, which the company called "Nettops." An Atom
desktop could serve as a second machine in developed countries or a primary
desktop in developing countries, he said.
The Nettops will run either Windows Vista Starter, Windows XP or Linux, Intel
said. PC makers will decide which OS they use and set the exact pricing.
Intel has made it clear it wants to push Linux with the Nettop platform, said
Roger Kay, president of Endpoint
Technologies Associates. The Nettops are being conceived more as an appliance,
and Windows Vista Starter is not designed for that type of machine. In addition,
Windows Vista Starter will only be offered in developing countries.
The low-cost desktops are part of Intel's plan to push Atom chips into new
product categories, which also include low-cost notebooks and "ultramobile"
devices. The company is putting single-core Diamondville chips in notebooks
priced between $250 to $300 and Silverthorne chips in ultramobile PCs, which
Intel calls mobile Internet devices (MIDs).
Nettops may carry a dual-core version of Diamondville, which Intel is developing.
Diamondville is based on Silverthorne, which has a small size and is designed
for ultramobile devices.
The chip for Nettops has been designed from the ground up for low-cost desktops,
Al-Khaledy said. It is not a modified version of Intel's Celeron and Core 2
Duo chips, which are capable of handling more intense computing tasks, he said.
Atom desktops may appeal to users in developing countries looking to buy their
first computer, Kay said. They may also appeal to price-sensitive buyers, but
not to people who need more computing power such as gamers and office workers,
he said. Atom desktops also may not be as successful as MIDs, Kay said.
"Intel's throwing a lot of mud up against the wall, and some of it may
stick, and some of it may not. Nettop seems like one of the more likely to fall
off," Kay said.
IDG News Service