Intel Corp. may be preparing another pricing attack on its arch-rival Advanced Micro Devices and is currently projected to start offering its successful Core 2 Duo microprocessors with higher speed processor system bus (PSB) at mainstream price-points right after their announcement in the third quarter.
A news-story over HKEPC web-site claims that Intel is preparing four versions of its desktop processors that use 1333MHz processor bus: the Core 2 Duo models E6850 (3.0GHz, 4MB unified L2 cache), E6750 (2.66GHz, 4MB unified L2 cache), E6550 (2.33GHz, 4MB unified L2 cache) and E6540 (2.33GHz, 4MB unified L2 cache) that will cost $266, $183 and $163 respectively for the higher-end models. The pricing of the model E6540 is not yet announced to the chipmaker’s partners, but its difference from the model E6550 will be in the lack of Trusted Execution Technology, also known under LaGrande code-name.Even though platforms for the new microprocessors with 1333MHz processor bus support are likely to be pretty expensive, considering the new Bearlake core-logic set, necessity to use DDR3 memory and ability to support PCI Express 2.0 bus, the arrival of powerful new Core 2 Duo chips may catalyze price waterfall on the models unveiled last year, which should increase pressure on AMD in mainstream market segment.
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News source: Xbit Labs
A news-story over HKEPC web-site claims that Intel is preparing four versions of its desktop processors that use 1333MHz processor bus: the Core 2 Duo models E6850 (3.0GHz, 4MB unified L2 cache), E6750 (2.66GHz, 4MB unified L2 cache), E6550 (2.33GHz, 4MB unified L2 cache) and E6540 (2.33GHz, 4MB unified L2 cache) that will cost $266, $183 and $163 respectively for the higher-end models. The pricing of the model E6540 is not yet announced to the chipmaker’s partners, but its difference from the model E6550 will be in the lack of Trusted Execution Technology, also known under LaGrande code-name.Even though platforms for the new microprocessors with 1333MHz processor bus support are likely to be pretty expensive, considering the new Bearlake core-logic set, necessity to use DDR3 memory and ability to support PCI Express 2.0 bus, the arrival of powerful new Core 2 Duo chips may catalyze price waterfall on the models unveiled last year, which should increase pressure on AMD in mainstream market segment.
















I'd be much more interested if they had a newer FSB set at 1400mhz or even 1600mhz which I think is as high as Intel will take the FSB before they're ready to move on to CSI in late 2008 or early 2009.
What's CSI?
What's CSI?
Component System Interconnect
It is basically what is replacing the old and outdated FSB (front side bus). It is a serialized interconnect similar to PCI-Express.
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