posted by Thom Holwerda on Thu 5th Jun 2008 19:58 UTC
Via announced its Nano platform for low-power budget notebooks a week ago. The Nano platform, based one a new microarchitecture called Isaiah, is designed to compete with Intel's Atom processors. These types of processors are generally low-cost, and suited for devices like Asus' Eee PC and similar offerings from other hardware vendors.
At the same time, nVIDIA announced its own processor line to compete with Intel's Atom, with an offering using ARM technology instead of x86. eWeek writes:
The new Tegra 650 series processor is extremely small - 144 millimeters square - and will consume less than one watt of power, which should help increase battery life. The system-on-a-chip design includes an 800MHz ARM 11 CPU, a low-watt Nvidia GeForce GPU (graphics processing unit), an image processor and a high-definition video processor. It can also support hard disk drives, a mouse and other peripherals.
Intel of course has the advantage of being a very well established name, and its sheer size could prove quite the daunting opponent for Via and nVIDIA. Still, eWeek writes, analysts believe the two smaller companies stand a chance. "Intel's sheer size and its OEM relationships should serve it well here," writes Charles King, an analyst with Pund-IT Research, "But the greater market for netbooks and similar devices is so immature that determining the dividing line between failure and success is likely to be challenging for the foreseeable future."
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