Advertisement
Promo

Become a member of the ZDNet UK community

Search

You searched for

'banias'.

This search returned 82 results. Displaying: 21-40.



IDF: Don't expect a low-voltage Pentium 4

News Instead, it will continue to use the low- and ultralow-voltage Pentium III chips for this market and then replace them with Banias, an energy-efficient chip coming in the first half of 2003. Banias, which is being built from the ground up to fit...

[February 28, 2002, 10:52]

IDF: Intel to use desktop strength in wireless market

News For instance, the company is pairing the module with Banias, a new notebook chip coming in the first half of next year, said Anand Chandrasekher, vice president of Intel's mobile products division. Intel is qualifying, or extensively testing...

[September 11, 2002, 15:21]

Intel pumps cash into wireless start-ups

News Intel itself will jump into the Wi-Fi chip market early next year with its Banias processor for notebooks. Most Banias notebooks will contain an integrated Wi-Fi module from Intel, code-named Calexico, that will contain Intel's first 802.11a and...

[October 22, 2002, 9:10]

Sony revamps its mobile range review

Reviews The X505 is built around an ultra-low-voltage 1.1GHz Pentium M processor (the original Banias core, not the most recent Dothan), the 855GM chipset with integrated graphics, 512MB of DDR RAM and a 20GB hard disk (the latter being a tiny 1.8in.drive).

[May 16, 2004, 9:20]

IDC: PC market on the comeback trail

News One of the first major product releases in 2003, for instance, will be Banias, a brand-new, energy-efficient notebook chip from Intel. Most major manufacturers will release Banias notebooks. After two tough years, the PC market will experience...

[December 6, 2002, 10:18]

Intel chips to go their own way

News Prescott and the Pentium-M -- formerly known as Banias -- will mark an evolutionary breaking point. Prescott and Dothan, a 90-nanometre version of Banias, will be two of the first chips made on the 90-nanometre process.

[February 18, 2003, 13:22]

Mobile mania at IDF review

Reviews Banias A Panasonic notebook designed around the Banias mobile processor. A Banias-based notebook from Panasonic, running at 1.3GHz. Prototype Banias notebooks from IBM and Samsung were also on display, running Windows more or less reliably and with...

[September 11, 2002, 15:11]

Intel pumps up Wi-Fi investments

News Intel is also looking to jump onto the Wi-Fi bandwagon with its first Wi-Fi module, code-named Calexico, which will be part of a platform that will include its upcoming Banias notebook processor. Intel originally planned to come out with a dual...

[December 18, 2002, 8:32]

Big price cuts ahead for Pentium 4-M

News The company continues to make notebook Pentium III chips, which are both cheaper and more battery-friendly, at the same time it is touting Banias, a new mobile chip coming in the first half of 2003 that Intel has already said will be its mainstay...

[March 27, 2002, 15:32]

Transmeta gears for comeback with Astro

News The chip will compete directly against Banias, a low-power chip coming from Intel in the first quarter that will effectively become the company's primarily mobile chip and replace the Pentium 4 in notebooks.

[November 19, 2002, 8:04]

IDF: Intel sneaks a peek at new tech

News Wed 11 Sep: The chipmaker's Calexico PC card modem will allow PCs and notebooks to connect to wireless networks, and it'll be tested only with the Banias mobile processor Intel unveils Banias secrets Wed 11 Sep: Banias is Intel's first totally new...

[September 10, 2002, 12:02]

Pentium 4: Too hot to handle?

News Obviously, Intel realises that or they wouldn't be developing 'Banias' for 2003," he said. Banias is the code name for a mobile chip in development. However, analysts have pointed out that Banias incorporates technology from the Pentium III-M, not...

[December 13, 2001, 9:29]

Intel names next-gen mobile processor

News The new chip family, which includes the processor formerly known by the code name Banias, was designed to help manufacturers build notebooks that use less power and offer extended battery life, along with better wireless networking capabilities.

[January 8, 2003, 13:48]

Intel's mobile chip plan revealed

News Intel is likely to have to cut prices of its mobile microprocessors between now and the 2003 launch of its next-generation integrated "Banias" processor, an analyst said on Wednesday. At that point, Intel will take another swing at an integrated...

[July 20, 2001, 9:06]

Inside Intel's Pentium M/Centrino review

Reviews Unusually, the chip giant has been quite open prior to launch about the technical details of the project codenamed Banias (the major redesign of the Pentium for the portable market), and our initial tests suggest that Intel's promises about...

[March 12, 2003, 11:52]

Intel set to overhaul Pentium 4 by 2005

News Dothan," a successor to the upcoming notebook chip "Banias," will appear around the same time. Banias, appearing in the first half of 2003, will showcase a number of technologies that Intel hopes will curb these problems.

[October 9, 2002, 8:52]

Intel starts mobile Celeron shift

News We are targeting some specific mobile markets with the ULV mobile Celeron with Banias technology," said Mary-Ellin Brooks, an Intel spokeswoman. Banias was Intel's code name for the Pentium M. Intel has quietly made available the first member of...

[December 3, 2003, 15:20]

Price cuts loom as Intel promotes faster Pentium

News Additionally, the company plans to release a 2.2GHz Pentium 4 for notebooks before the end of the year and unveil "Banias" a new, energy-efficient mobile chip designed specifically for notebooks. Banias will not be sold under the Pentium name, a...

[July 23, 2002, 13:31]

'Hammer' chips away at processor limits

News Other chips with large caches and a high number of transistors include Banias, the code name of a notebook chip coming from Intel in the first quarter. Banias will contain 77 million transistors and 1MB of cache.

[November 27, 2002, 14:50]

Intel forum focuses on consumers

News Banias, code-named after an archaeological site in Israel, will run the same software as standard Pentium chips but consume less power and feature other notebook-friendly features, according to Frank Spindler, general manager of Intel's mobile...

[August 16, 2001, 15:10]

Video icon

Video



Skip Sub Navigation Links to CNET Brand Links

Help

Become part of the ZDNet community.

Newsletters