Looking to build on its channel momentum, Intel this week plans to unveil to partners its next-generation Centrino Duo and vPro platforms as well as its Intel Inside 2007 program.
At the Intel Solutions Summit 2007 in San Diego, executives will highlight emerging mobile, desktop and server opportunities for system builders and Premier partners based on the upcoming "Santa Rosa" Centrino Duo processor, which is expected to launch in May, sources close to the company said.
As part of that, Intel is preparing new Verified by Intel (VBI) chipsets based on the Santa Rosa platform to simplify the development of whitebooks, the sources said.
Intel is also expected to introduce new VBI form factors as a way to give system builders more flexibility for designing ultra-mobile PCs. The current VBI offerings are for 14.1-inch and 15.4-inch form factors. Yet Intel is expected to unveil 12-inch, 13-inch and 17-inch form factors and announce more manufacturers supporting VBI, sources said.
The Santa Rosa platform consists of a more advanced Centrino Duo processor, support for 802.11n Wi-Fi, the new "Crestine" graphics chipset, vPro and Intel's Advanced Management Technology (AMT), integrated WiMAX and Intel's "Robson" non-volatile memory technology that boosts performance.
The Santa Clara, Calif.-based chip giant said it plans to make its vPro platform, code-named Weybridge, available in the second half.
Weybridge, to be based on the Intel Core 2 Duo E6x50 processor and Q35 Express chipset, is the first to incorporate Intel's Trusted Execution Technology, formerly code-amed LaGrande, new industry management specifications DMWG 1.0 and WS-Man, and enhanced security in AMT.
Intel's push on VBI and other initiatives such as vPro demonstrate the company's commitment to help system builders succeed in the fast-growing notebook and managed-services businesses.
Channel partners said it's important that Intel's VBI common building blocks are accepted and made more widely available to them because they expect a good share of PC growth over the next several years to come from notebooks, a segment now dominated by larger OEMs.
Partners can earn two to five points selling Acer notebooks vs. 20 percent on custom-designed VBI systems, so it's an important technology for many system builders.
"We're starting out slow on VBI, but we're betting on it," said Joe Toste, vice president of marketing at Equus Computer Systems, Minneapolis. "One distributor told us he wasn't trying to give us a notebook just like a mainstream tier-one notebook for $799, but that's exactly what the channel needs. VBI will baseline the competition so we can do services."
One source said Intel will ship its VBI 965 chipset to channel partners at the same time it ships the chipset to OEMs. That would represent a major time-to-market advantage for system builders, since the availability of VBI chipsets has typically lagged behind that of top-tier OEMs by three to six months, the source added.
"For us, Santa Rosa is a technology that we will certainly adopt as soon as our notebook vendors have such notebooks available," said James Huang, marketing manager at Amax Information Technologies, a Fremont, Calif.-based system builder and contract manufacturer. "Again, OEM projects account for most of our revenue, while notebooks account for about 10 to 15 percent only. Therefore, VBI may not have much impact on us vs. with other customers. We simply offer whatever our notebook vendors have."
Santa Rosa and Weybridge are among several products and programs Intel is preparing for partners in 2007 and 2008.
In the fourth quarter of 2007 or first quarter of 2008, Intel is expected to release a series of new multicore "Bensley' Xeon processors, and a new mini ITX desktop board is due out in the second quarter of 2007.
|