Intel Debuts Longhorn-Ready Platforms

By Nate Mook and David Worthington | Published May 26, 2005, 4:36 PM

Intel on Thursday formally introduced two new chipsets designed for home and office PCs. Intel's Professional Business Platform, or the 945G Express Chipset, bundles networking and advanced management technology, while the 945P includes consumer-oriented features such as advanced audio and video capabilities.

The dual-core 64-bit Intel Pentium D processor powers the 945P platform, allowing customers to perform two CPU intensive tasks at once. Intel's Professional Business Platform includes the Pentium 4 670, a new 3.8-GHz 64-bit processor, although some system builders plan to offer the Pentium D as well.

With processor speed becoming less of a marketing tool, Intel has turned its focus toward selling "platforms" that combine a processor, chipset and peripherals such as networking or audio capabilities.

"We want to add more value beyond gigahertz," said Greg Bryant, general manager of Intel's Digital Office Platforms Division. OEMS including Dell and HP will manufacture systems built on the new 945 platforms.

The Professional Business Platform is aimed at IT administrators and introduces Intel's Active Management Technology (AMT) that aids in monitoring, installation of security patches and remotely diagnosing hardware problems. The 945G chipset also enhances power management, reduces noise and packs in new networking features.

On the consumer end, meanwhile, Intel has designed the Pentium D for simultaneous use scenarios in the "digital home." The 945P boasts 7.1-channel surround sound and multiple output jacks for sending audio to numerous devices around the home simultaneously.

Both 945 chipsets will feature Intel's Graphics Media Accelerator (GMA) 950, which doubles 3-D performance and supports the latest high-definition displays. Intel says the technology was developed with Longhorn, the next release of Windows, in mind.

"Microsoft and Intel are working closely together to deliver a totally new experience for mainstream business computing," said Will Poole, Microsoft senior vice president for Windows.

The new Pentium D will be available in three speeds: 2.8 GHz, 3 GHz and 3.2 GHz. Pricing for the chips will be less than half of AMD's dual-core offerings, at $241, $316 and $530 USD respectively, in 1,000-unit lots. The single-core Pentium 4 670 at 3.8 GHz is priced at $851 USD.

Comments

Holy s**t! You need a Pentium D (or AMD X2) as a minimum requirement for Longhorn?

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No you don't. Where did you see that in this article?

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Well the title itself is quite mis-leading, like making older platforms like 925/915/865 to be not-Longhorn-ready.

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Bah... when has *any* hardware even been enough for the initial release of an operating system... it's only in the last 12 months that PC's have really performed the way we want them to with XP...

I'll be cynical an assume my 2.5 year old PC ain't going to make the cut, but I won't be outlaying for a new one.

I'm sure it'll be cool though, maybe one of my friends will buy one!

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yeah seriously. relax asellus, you will be fine running longhorn on whatever crappy compy you have.

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Well in some ways you are right. But then to make XP run the way you want doesn't mean the best way. XP will run fine on older comps with no pretty gui and no effects and stuff. And longhorn will be similar (altho I don't think it'll go down to the levels of "classic". Aparently running it on an older comp will mean you won't get the full visuals etc. But these need DX9 to run so for a laptop on batteries you wouldn't want this either. going to be interesting to see exactly how scalable it is!

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