Miscellaneous Reviews
Interview: Bigfoot's Killer NIC, Exposed
Since its release, the Killer NIC has garnered a reputation for being an extravagant and largely unnecessary add-on for the do-it-yourselfer. Seeking additional insight, we approached the card's designer. Read More
Miscellaneous Previous news
- Maxtor ships Atlas 10K V and Atlas 15K II enterprise drives
- Elpida develops first 1 Gigabit DDR2-800 module
- Ardentec ramping 12" wafer-probing capacity
- Nvidia delivers AGP-capable GeForce 6600GT processor
- GeCube announces Radeon X700Pro-series graphics cards with heatpipe...
- MSI expects motherboard shipments to grow 10 percent in 2005
- Asus ships first nForce4 SLI motherboard
- Hewlett-Packard backs Blu-ray disc technology
- Taiwan optical disc makers: OEM prices of 4x, 8x DVD discs drop to...
- Albatron debuts Nvidia AGP6600 and AGP6600GT cards for the AGP 8x...
Intel says shifting focus of Itanium to higher-end
8:31 PM - November 18, 2004 by
Wolfgang Gruener
Source: Tom's Hardware US – Category : Miscellaneous 0 comment
Source: Tom's Hardware US – Category : Miscellaneous 0 comment
An effort by Intel to sell its Itanium 2 chip into high-volume, lower-end computer servers has not worked, the president of the world's largest chip maker said in an interview published on Thursday.
Itanium, which was jointly developed by Intel and Hewlett-Packard, has not yet found a large following in a server market crowded with competition from chips made by IBM, Sun, and AMD.
Read the complete story . (Reuters)
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- IBM joins AUTOSAR
- Harvatek licenses white-LED patents from Osram
- Intel says shifting focus of Itanium to higher-end
- Maxtor ships Atlas 10K V and Atlas 15K II enterprise drives
- Elpida develops first 1 Gigabit DDR2-800 module
- Ardentec ramping 12" wafer-probing capacity
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