The 1.2-GHz Athlon 4 processor and 950-MHz Duron processor are both designed for use in notebook computers and will ship in Presario 700 notebooks from Compaq later this quarter. The chips cost $525 and $160, respectively.
Brooks Gray, a Technology Business Research analyst, says AMD's market-share ambitions could mean good news for customers. If AMD wants to catch up, it's going to have to push the prices of its chips way down, and that could lead to lower prices. "We've already seen notebook prices drop over the last year," he says. "There's been a huge push and price war at the notebook level. This could make that even more dramatic."
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