AMD wants to make small laptops cheaper with Yukon
Yukon mobile chips designed to enhance PC experience in cheaper laptops
IDG News Service - Advanced Micro Devices Inc. hopes to help reduce the prices of expensive ultraportable laptops with mobile chips it is expected to introduce today.
AMD's new mobile platform, called Yukon, will include chips designed for small, affordable laptops that provide a full PC experience without compromising on features, the company said. The laptops will be similar in size to ultraportable devices, but less expensive, according to AMD.
The announcement comes ahead of the Consumer Electronics Show, where the company may reveal further details about the chips. CES is being held in Las Vegas Thursday to Saturday.
AMD envisions Yukon laptops delivering performance comparable to more-expensive ultraportables, allowing users to run high-definition multimedia, gaming and productivity applications. Yukon-based laptops will be thin and light, with screens ranging from 10 in. to 14 in.; pricing will range from $499 to $1,499, according to AMD.
"While we do see a sweet spot... in the 11-in. to 13-in. range, our OEM partners may choose to use the Yukon platform to deliver products in different form factors targeting different spaces in the market," said Bahr Mahony, director of product marketing at AMD.
An AMD executive late last year said the premium pricing of ultraportable laptops such as the MacBook Air was a key impediment to their adoption by mainstream users. Those users don't have an appetite for expensive ultraportables, AMD has said.
AMD says the Yukon chips fit in a new category it calls "ultrathin" laptops, which falls between the ultraportable laptop and netbook segments. Ultraportables are too expensive, while netbooks, though cheap, provide a limited PC experience, AMD contends.
The company has said it doesn't want to get into the low-end netbook space dominated by Intel Corp.'s Atom processor. Nor does it want to enter the mobile space, which Intel is targeting with its Menlow chips. The low-end netbook space delivers low margins per chip, according to industry analysts, and AMD may not be able to compete there with Intel, which is the world's largest chip maker.
Hewlett-Packard Co. will use Yukon chips in its Pavilion DV2 laptop, which starts at under $700. AMD didn't comment on whether other PC makers were planning to offer Yukon-based laptops.
The platform includes the Neo processor, which runs at 1.6 GHz, the M690T chip set and ATI Radeon graphics controllers. It supports as much as 1GB of RAM. Yukon-based laptops can run Microsoft's Windows Vista operating system.
AMD declined to comment on pricing or availability of the Yukon platform or the Neo chip.
The chips should better position AMD to compete with Intel, which offers specially designed low-power chips being used in ultraportable laptops including the MacBook Air, Lenovo's X300, Fujitsu's LifeBook P8020 and Hewlett-Packard's EliteBook 2530p. Intel also develops the Atom processor, which is used in netbooks.
AMD first announced Yukon in November as part of an updated product road map. The update was part of an effort to reverse financial losses and better compete with industry leader Intel, analysts said.
Also at CES, AMD is expected to launch Phenom II desktop chips, which are designed for gamers and enthusiasts. According to retail Web sites, the quadcore chips include 8MB of cache and run at speeds of 2.8 GHz to 3 GHz. AMD last year overclocked the Phenom II processor to run as fast as 4 GHz on air-cooled systems, and up to 5 GHz with liquid-nitrogen cooling.
Faster Phenom II chips could reach consumers by midyear, when DDR3 memory support is added to sockets on the motherboard. DDR3 provides more bandwidth for quicker data transfers between the CPU and memory in PCs.



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