Expected to arrive in the high performance computing market sometime during 2012, Intel's next generation Itanium processor, code-named Poulson is set to be detailed at the International Solid-State Circuits Conference (ISSCC) in February, 2011.Coming to us via the xbitlabs website, that cites the conference... |
25 November 2010 06:04 GMT |
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Leading chip maker Intel has once again delayed the official release of its high-end server chip, codenamed Tukwilla. According to the Santa Clara, California-based manufacturer, the newly announced delay to a chip that was touted as “the world's first 2 billion transistor microprocessor” is due to s... |
6 February 2009 06:25 GMT |
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Intel, the leading manufacturer of processors, plans to ship a quad-core version of its server-oriented Itanium processors. The new processors, which are code-named Tukwila, are expected to become available to vendors later this year, with the first servers built using this chip to arrive in early 2009.The new Tukwil... |
20 May 2008 06:46 GMT |
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Intel's 2 billion transistors Itanium processor, also known as Tukwila, managed to stir up some attention lately, as it's not every day you see a chip packing such amount of transistors. Tukwila is a quad-core part built on the 65-nanometer process node that comes with a huge amount of cache memory.Earlier ... |
21 March 2008 04:44 GMT |
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Intel has just announced its vendors that it will ditch the "Itanium 2" brand, that will be replaced with the more generic "Itanium" name starting with March 2 this year. The move is part of Intel's new branding strategy that also includes the addition of the Intel Montevina platform as Intel Centrino 2."In orde... |
28 February 2008 03:36 GMT |
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Chip manufacturer Intel has announced earlier this week world's first processor to feature two billion transistors on the die. Called "Tukwila", the chip is part of the Itanium family and has a thermal envelope of 170W.The members of Intel's Itanium team yesterday took the floor and came with further juicy ... |
8 February 2008 04:01 GMT |
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