Intel plans unprecedented push for new chip set
Intel plans to focus unprecedented attention on one of the more obscure components of PC when it launches its newest chip set next month.
The attention follows a fundamental shift in Intel's product marketing strategy, in which the world's largest chipmaker has said it will focus less on the speed of the chips and more on the features and user benefits of the Intel platform.
Chip sets -- groups of integrated circuits that work together as humble gatekeepers for data coming into and out of the core of the PC -- have tended to miss out on the media and marketing attention paid to the brains of the operation, the microprocessor.
Microprocessors, like Intel's Pentium 4 or Itanium 2 chips, are more visible because they control how fast the PC can run, and consequently have gotten the media attention and millions of Intel's advertising dollars.
Intel's newest chip set, code-named Grantsdale, will be pitched as one of the stars of the show as the importance of PC speed gives way to multimedia and communications features.
To be released by the end of June, Grantsdale has been upgraded with more powerful sound and graphics, an ability to turn a PC into a wireless access point, and a speedier link for peripherals and memory.
Intel designed Grantsdale to lead a new generation of "entertainment PCs" to be shipped later this year, part of a plan to bring PCs into the living room and displace consumer electronics equipment.
Grantsdale will be sold at around the same price as an older chip set, about $30 or $40 each, so it won't bring in more profits for Intel on its own.
Because the chip set incorporates features like Dolby audio and advanced 3D video previously found only in add-on cards, PC makers may be able to configure less expensive PCs that catch the eyes of power-hungry consumers.
Intel is aggressively adding features to its chips that cannot be quantified in raw speed figures, such as two-in-one, or dual-core, processors.
Analysts say Grantsdale could be the product that finally gets media and PC consumers to pay attention to the overlooked importance of chip sets. Grantsdale will improve memory speed, communications, multimedia and wireless communications.
Chip sets -- groups of integrated circuits that work together as humble gatekeepers for data coming into and out of the core of the PC -- have tended to miss out on the media and marketing attention paid to the brains of the operation, the microprocessor.
Microprocessors, like Intel's Pentium 4 or Itanium 2 chips, are more visible because they control how fast the PC can run, and consequently have gotten the media attention and millions of Intel's advertising dollars.
Intel's newest chip set, code-named Grantsdale, will be pitched as one of the stars of the show as the importance of PC speed gives way to multimedia and communications features.
To be released by the end of June, Grantsdale has been upgraded with more powerful sound and graphics, an ability to turn a PC into a wireless access point, and a speedier link for peripherals and memory.
Intel designed Grantsdale to lead a new generation of "entertainment PCs" to be shipped later this year, part of a plan to bring PCs into the living room and displace consumer electronics equipment.
Grantsdale will be sold at around the same price as an older chip set, about $30 or $40 each, so it won't bring in more profits for Intel on its own.
Because the chip set incorporates features like Dolby audio and advanced 3D video previously found only in add-on cards, PC makers may be able to configure less expensive PCs that catch the eyes of power-hungry consumers.
Intel is aggressively adding features to its chips that cannot be quantified in raw speed figures, such as two-in-one, or dual-core, processors.
Analysts say Grantsdale could be the product that finally gets media and PC consumers to pay attention to the overlooked importance of chip sets. Grantsdale will improve memory speed, communications, multimedia and wireless communications.