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Intel readies scaleable StrongArm processors for handheld systems

Intel readies scaleable StrongArm processors for handheld systems

EETimes

Intel readies scaleable StrongArm processors for handheld systems
By Mark LaPedus, Semiconductor Business News
August 23, 2000 (10:05 a.m. EST)
URL: http://www.eetimes.com/story/OEG20000823S0003

San Jose -- Intel Corp. here today will expand its efforts in the handheld chip market by announcing its second-generation processor for cellular phones, personal digital assistants (PDAs), and related systems.

The new XScale product, which is an updated version of Intel's StrongArm RISC-based processor series, is a flexible, low-power device designed to handle clock speeds up to 1 GHz, according to Ronald Smith, vice president and general manager of the company's Wireless Communications & Computing Group, headquartered in Folsom, Calif.

Intel will begin showing samples of the XScale at the Intel Developer Forum (IDF) in San Jose today, and it plans to ship a 600-MHz version of the chip by year's end, said Smith said.

"The XScale is an extension to the StrongArm, with a much broader range of performance," Smith said.

Intel's XScale disclosure at IDF is not a product announcement, but rather an effort to give system developers information about the new, super-pipelined architecture for the StrongArm. This super-pipelined architecture is designed to meets the requirements of current and future handheld devices, Smith said.

A key element in the XScale architecture is a feature called Dynamic Voltage Management, which enables the RISC-based chip to support various clock speeds and power-consumption levels. "Voltage and power can change on the fly with this chip," Smith explained.

In other words, XScale is a scaleable architecture. At the high-end, the chip can be tuned to support 1-GHz clock rates with power consumption of just 1.5 watts, according to Intel. At the low-end, the XScale chip could support a 200-MHz clock rate with power consumption of only 40 millwatts, said the Santa Clara, Calif.-based processor giant.

The first chip to be introduced in the market will be a 600-MHz device with a power consumption of 0.50 watts, according to Smith. The 600-MHz chip is expected to hit the streets by year's end, Smith added in a pre-an nouncement briefing on Tuesday.

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