Intel To Unveil Dual-Core Pentiums On Monday

The ship date for Intel's first-ever dual core processors and chipsets is timed to coincide with the official 40th anniversary of Moore's Law.

Alexander Wolfe, Contributor

April 15, 2005

1 Min Read

Intel will formally announce that it has begun shipping its dual-core Pentium processors on Monday, the company said today.

"We are now confirming that [our] first-ever dual core PCs--our processors and chipsets--will be shipping from OEMs starting Monday morning," Intel spokeswoman Shannon Love said in an email. "For some time, this date had been set to coincide with the eve of the official 40th anniversary of Moore's Law."

"Our definition of launch means that consumers will be able to fulfill their PC orders starting Monday morning from a choice of OEMs," Love explained.

Intel first revealed that it had begun initial shipments of its Pentium Processor Extreme Edition model 840 to customers this past Monday, in an announcement made by company vice president Abhi Talwalker said at a conference in Taiwan. Running at a clock speed of 3.2 GHz, that processor is a high-end, dual-core CPU intended for use in advanced gaming and multimedia PCs that will retail for total systems prices of $1,500 and up.

Intel's formal disclosure Monday will kick off shipments of PCs to end users. Dell this week announced plans for two models equipped with the Pentium Processor Extreme Edition model 840. Alienware is expected to unveil a PC of its own Monday.

Intel's desktop dual-core roadmap includes three other processors designated Pentium D. They are the models 820, 830, and 840, with clock speeds of 2.8 GHz, 3.0 GHz, and 3.2 GHz, respectively. All have 800 MHz front-side buses and dual L2 caches of 1 MB in capacity. The processors also support Intel's EM64T 64-bit instruction-set extensions.

"We will ship millions of dual cores this year," Intel's Love added.

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About the Author(s)

Alexander Wolfe

Contributor

Alexander Wolfe is a former editor for InformationWeek.

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