Special Intel 'Ivy Bridge' chips to enable new laptops, tablets



Very power efficient Core processors can enable more designs like Acer's 0.48-inch thick Aspire S7 touch-screen ultrabook.

Very power efficient Core processors can enable more designs like Acer's 0.48-inch thick Aspire S7 touch-screen ultrabook.



(Credit:
Brooke Crothers)


Intel will talk more about limited-run versions of its Ivy Bridge chips next week at the Consumer Electronics Show that are expected to be used by select device vendors, as it tries to take on rivals with increasingly power-efficient Core series processors.


"Limited SKUs" of Intel's 3rd Generation processor, aka Ivy Bridge, will have a power rating below 10 watts, allowing the silicon to throttle down to a sub-10-watt power envelope, an Intel spokesperson told CNET. This "will enable new ultrabook designs" and the chip is "coming very soon," he added.


That power-efficiency rating is an important yardstick because Intel's mainstream Core series processors have ratings no lower than 17 watts -- those versions are used in ultrabooks and Apple's
MacBook Air laptops today. And anything below 10 watts from Intel has historically been limited to its lower-performance Atom chips used in
tablets and smartphones.


Typically, the lower the power rating, the better the battery life and the thinner the device's design can be.


Intel did not say how far below 10 watts these special "Y" series Ivy Bridge processors will go, though Intel vice president Kirk Skaugen is expected to talk about the processors at
CES.

These Ivy Bridge chips were first mentioned at Intel's annual developer conference last year but it wasn't clear at that time if Intel and its partners would go forward with designs. But it appears that some PC vendors will have select models in the coming months, according to Intel.

"The designs wins that are out there include ultrabooks, convertibles, and tablets," the Intel spokesperson said.

Skaugen will also talk about the future Haswell processor -- due later in the year. Y versions of that chip are expected to offer even better power efficiency than the low-power Ivy Bridge chips.

And the Intel spokesperson was careful to point out that he doesn't expect an explosion of new designs based on the special low-power Ivy Bridge chip as "we are right on the cusp of Haswell."

Intel is more focused than ever on making its mainstream Core chips as power efficient as possible as rivals that supply chips based on the power-sipping ARM design crank up performance.

Samsung, for example, is now offering a quad-core ARM design for phones, and Apple continues to get better at designing higher performance A series chips for its iPhone and iPad.

To date, Intel's answer to ARM has been the Atom line of processors, but the newest versions have been criticized for their lackluster performance when running more-demanding applications in Windows 8.

Atom chips will move to entirely new design later this year that is expected address this performance gap and get them closer to Intel's mainstream processors in performance.

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