|
SAN
FRANCISCO – Intel claims to have found a strong market for its first new
microprocessor design in years. The world’s largest computer chip maker will
market a new processor, code-named Diamondville, to be introduced near the
middle of this year. Targeted for super-compact, mobile PCs, it is expected
that it will cost significantly less than processors sold to PC makers.
“At the
beginning, we said let’s see what is the opportunity in the emerging markets,”
said Mooly Eden of Intel’s Mobile Platforms Group. “Now, I wouldn’t be
surprised if at least 50% of the Netbooks would be sold in mature markets.”
Netbook
is the name Intel gave to its portable PC, but PC makers such as Hewlett-Packard
and Dell, which will use the processor, will market portable PCs under their own
names. Referring to marketing studies estimating the potential sales of the
Netbook-type PCs that will be sold, Eden said, “I believe the number in 2011
will be well above 50 million.”
Dean
McCarron, analyst at Mercury Research, said the Eee PC, the diminutive laptop-style
computer marketed by ASUS, sold 350,000 units in the fourth quarter, and has
been a very popular product. “Immediately, that attracted the attention of a
whole raft of competitors,” McCarron said. Intel’s Eden stated that a typical
Netbook would have a diagonal screen size of 7 to 10 inches, indicating that it
will be similar in size to the Eee PC.
Industry
reports indicate that the profit margin on the Diamondville processor will be high
as well - as much as 50 to 60%. “They
get 2,500 of those suckers out of each wafer,” said Insight 64 analyst and
consultant Nathan Brookwood. “Literally, they could sell them for $10 a pop and
still make money." |