Intel 'Santa Rosa' Centrino laptops hit shelves - Technology Forum - Home Theater, Computer, Televisions, Personal Electronics and more!
Technology Forum -  Home Theater, Computer, Televisions,  Personal Electronics and more!  
Go Back   Technology Forum - Home Theater, Computer, Televisions, Personal Electronics and more! > Computer Discussion > Laptops
User Name
Password


Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 05-11-2007, 10:00 AM   #1 (permalink)
Administrator
 
administrator's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Referrals: : 0
Posts: 113
Points: 25,687.83
Bank: 0.00
Total Points: 25,687.83
Default Intel 'Santa Rosa' Centrino laptops hit shelves

Intel launched the "Santa Rosa" upgrade of its Centrino notebook platform on Wednesday, running on PCs from Hewlett-Packard, Dell, Lenovo , MSI and others.

Intel has seen strong sales for its original Centrino platform, and a market success with the improved version could help the company to continue its comeback against chip-making rival Advanced Micro Devices (AMD). Already, Intel has tallied 230 platforms from various PC vendors that will be designed around the new Centrino, the company said.

The new version adds longer battery life and faster computing to the technology bundle of a processor, chipset and wireless card. Intel will keep the name Centrino Duo for the consumer version, although changes include a faster Core 2 Duo processor, support for the draft version of 802.11n wireless networking and a Turbo Memory feature that supplements the standard hard drive with NAND flash for faster booting.

"Probably the thing most people will notice is the graphics controller, for better video capability," said Mike Trainor, Intel's chief mobile technology evangelist. That will earn the new platform high marks from video gamers and DVD watchers, since improved color control will make the monitor show images nearly as vivid as a TV set, he said.

In an appeal to corporate buyers, Intel also launched a business version of Santa Rosa called Centrino Pro, which borrows many of the automated security and IT management features from Intel's vPro business desktop platform. That will allow corporate system administrators to repair and protect employees' notebooks remotely, inspecting faulty PCs or adding software patches over wireless links.

Adding remote corporate management technology to notebook PCs will meet a strong customer demand, PC vendors say.

"One of the key things we've been hearing is the need to simplify the overall IT environment," said Brett McAnally, senior marketing manager for Dell's Latitude business notebook line. "Rising complexity has introduced challenges where customers have trouble focusing on their core business tasks."

Dell will use Centrino Duo in the new D630 thin-and-light notebook and the D830 high-performance notebook introduced on Wednesday, replacing the previous models D620 and D820. The new platform extends battery life on those products by 15 percent compared to the standard Centrino, reaching up to 9.4 hours, Dell said.

Dell also plans to use the Centrino platform in its Latitude D430 ultra-mobile notebook and Precision M4300 workstation "in the coming weeks," and will add Centrino Pro to its lineup by the fourth quarter when it launches a model D630c business notebook.

Dell charges AUD$1,739 for the D630, with its 14.1-inch screen and 4.48-pound weight. The company charges AUD$1,874 for the D830, with a 15.4-inch display and 5.97-pound weight. For the high-value market segment, Dell also unveiled its second Latitude notebook to use an AMD chip, the entry-level D531, selling for AUD$1,659 with Turion 64 or Sempron processor.

The power efficiency of the new Centrino platform also answers customer demand for cooler, quieter PCs, said Tom Ribble, director of ThinkPad product marketing for Lenovo.

Lenovo unveiled the ThinkPad T61 with Centrino Pro and ThinkPad R61 with Centrino Duo, both with 14-inch widescreen displays and reduced surface temperature and fan noise.

HP also announced plans to sell Centrino-based notebooks, supporting Centrino Pro on its HP Compaq 2710p, 2510p and 6910p business notebooks.

NEC will be releasing the Versa E6300 and Versa E6310 series while MSI will be the PR200 and PR600. MSI's notebook product manager, Frank Chen, said the 15.4in screen PR600 would see for between $1,800 - $2,000 when it is released later this month.
administrator is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-30-2009, 02:41 AM   #2 (permalink)
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2009
Referrals: : 0
Posts: 15
Points: 200.69
Bank: 0.00
Total Points: 200.69
Default

Now that's a good development for Intel. It will entirely develop their marketing strategy once and for all, and competitors and affiliates are beginning to feel the overcome of Intel.
technosplash is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are Off
Refbacks are On

Points Per Thread View: 1.00
Points Per Thread: 15.00
Points Per Reply: 5.00


» Links

» Links


Football Forum | Basketball Forum | Hockey Forum | Baseball Forum | Soccer Forum | Golf Forum | Lacrosse Forum
Wrestling Forum | Boxing Forum | MMA Forum | Paintball Forum | Snowmobile Forum | Snowboarding Forum | PWC Forum


Copyright (C) Verticalscope Inc Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.3.2