Intel forced to support PC133 SDRAM
Whew... will it never end?
Posted in Business, 19th February 1999 09:42 GMT
Free Download - Security Web 2.0
Reports from our friends in Japan claim that Intel will perform a somersault on its position on PC133 memory because of difficulties over yields on Rambus memories. Our friends in Japan are generally reliable. They tipped us off about the K6-3 being called the K6-III, remember? That news will cause sighs of relief from the rest of the industry, although we can expect to hear low moans from AMD and Cyrix, resolutely tracing Intel's footsteps in the PR snow. Where Intel leads, others must surely follow. Meanwhile, the same reports say that Intel will carry on pushing the 100MHz bus until the end of this year, but 133MHz bus products will reach 733MHz by year end. Before entering the bus gulag, Intel will release a 700MHz/100MHz part. ® See also Intel, chip-set vendors prepare for Rambus shortage

Ten Cooling Solutions to Support High-Density Server Deployment [WP42]
Implementing Energy Efficient Data Centers [WP114]
An Improved Architecture for High-Efficiency, High-Density Data Centers [WP126]
Web application security [3-2APYM3X]
The Register Guide to Extended Validation

The GUI that almost conquered the pocket
HP breaks Japanese excessive packaging record
Still sending naked email? Get your protection here
OpenOffice 3.0 - the only option for masochistic Linux users