You are here: Home / Blogs / Lora's blog / Intel Announces Intel® Atom™ Brand for New Family of Low-Power Processors

Intel Announces Intel® Atom™ Brand for New Family of Low-Power Processors

Intel Processor Atom Logo

Branding and branding messages are extremely important. Upon the announcement of the celeron, my thoughts were about celery and "a processor on a diet." With the release of the Atom family of processors, previously known by their code names Silverthorne and Diamondville, Intel has the branding correct. A small processor designed for Mobile PCs is what the industry has needed for about a year. Intel believes netbooks and nettops are also growing markets for the processors. OK. They didn't really think about those last two terms - but at least the idea of products becoming net-centric is correct.

According to the press release, "Up to 11 Intel Atom processor die -- the tiny slivers of silicon packed with 47 million transistors each -- would fit in an area the size of an American penny."

  • new microarchitecture designed specifically for small devices and low power
  • support for multiple threads for better performance and increased system responsiveness
  • 45nm process with hi-k metal gate technology
  • thermal design power (TDP) specification in 0.6-2.5 watt range and scale to 1.8GHz speeds
  • Intel® Core™ 2 Duo instruction set compatibility

Scott Ferguson loves the branding, too, calling the branding scheme truly atomic. He states:

The two processors that make up the new Atom line are Silverthorne, which is designed for MIDs, and Diamondville, which the company plans to include in low-cost PCs such as its own Classmate PC and the Asus Eee PC.

Hopefully, this new branding does not cause new consumer confusion - which processor is the best to purchase inside of a Mobile PC?

Your rating: None

Comments

Re: Intel Announces Intel® Atom

I can't help but sing --- "The Atom Family! Snap. Snap."

I know. I know. It's the Adams Family - but still -

User login

 

Latest poll

Which tool do you use more for reading?

Do you use your ebook reader, notebook, Tablet PC, MID, iPhone, Blackberry, or paper more for reading electronic books?

ASUS Eee PCs