Intel's next-gen Pine Trail Atom processors officially announced

Intel Announces Next-Generation Atom Platform
First Intel Chips to Integrate Graphics and Memory Controller in CPU;
Enables Power Reduction, Smaller Systems and Performance Improvements
NEWS HIGHLIGHTS
- Higher level of integration plus 45nm manufacturing enables significant power reduction, performance improvements and smaller package size.
- Average power consumption down 20 percent over previous generation, enabling longer battery life in netbooks.
- Over 80 netbook design wins from major OEMs including ASUS, Acer, Dell, Toshiba, Fujitsu, Lenovo, Samsung and MSI.
- Next-generation Intel® Atom™ systems available Jan. 4.
The newest Intel Atom platform for netbooks consists of a new Intel® Atom™ processor, the N450, and a new low-power Intel® NM10 Express Chipset. For entry level desktop PCs, it consists of either the Intel® Atom™ processor D410 or the dual core D510, also paired with the Intel® NM10 Express Chipset. The Atom processor was designed from the ground up for small devices and low power, and remains Intel's smallest chip, built on the company's 45nm high-k metal gate manufacturing process. The overall package, including chipset, just got smaller due to the increasing integration and 45nm manufacturing, which means smaller, more compact system designs, lower costs for OEMs and improved performance.
Broad Industry Momentum
Intel continues to see broad industry support for the Atom platform as netbooks in particular have been hot sellers during a recessionary year due to their affordability, function and small size (7-10.2" screens). Additionally, Intel is expecting to see broad channel adoption for Atom in a variety of small form factor entry-level desktop PCs at low price points, including ultra-small designs (less than 1-litre chassis), fanless designs, and low-cost all-in-one designs.
Since Intel announced the first Atom processors for netbooks and entry-level desktop PCs in June 2008, the market has expanded rapidly. Since introduction, Intel has shipped over 40 million Atom chips for netbooks to every major OEM around the world. In the same timeframe, netbooks ramped faster and sold more units than Apple's iPhone or the Nintendo Wii.* According to ABI Research, total Atom shipments for all segments are expected to continue to grow into the 100s of millions by 2011.* Intel is not letting up, offering the next-generation platform for OEMs to continue to innovate around.
"The Intel Atom processor has fueled an entirely new category of computing over the last year and a half and we think the growth will continue for devices like netbooks and entry-level PCs built around basic computing and Internet usage models," said Mooly Eden, Intel corporate vice president and general manager of Intel's PC Client Group. "We're excited to be delivering the next-generation Atom platform and working across the industry as we head into a second phase of growth, powering innovative new system designs with better performance, smaller footprints and better battery life."
Intel has over 80 design wins to-date for the new Atom platform from such leading OEMs as ASUS, Acer, Lenovo, Dell, MSI, Toshiba, Samsung and Fujitsu. While the bulk of the systems will feature the new Windows 7* Starter or Home Basic operating system, consumers will have a choice when it comes to selecting an operating system, with some OEMs offering MoblinTM Linux v2 as an alternative for customers who desire a customizable and differentiated user interface.
Worldwide netbook shipments by telecommunications companies such as T-Mobile, Vodafone, Orange and others are also growing and expected to fuel another round of expansion. Intel has been working closely with mobile operators and modem vendors to advance 3G capabilities in netbooks in established and emerging markets. To-date approximately a dozen service providers offer netbooks in various markets, and the numbers are expected to grow with the newest platform.
Improved processor and graphics performance
One of the most significant features of the new platform is the integration of memory controller and graphics into the CPU, a first in the industry on x-86 chips. That means two chips (CPU+chipset) instead of the previous three (CPU, chipset, I/O controller hub), a lower TDP, and substantial reductions in cost, overall footprint and power. The netbook platform features a 20 percent improvement in average power and a smaller package size over the previous Atom platform. This translates into smaller and more compact system designs and longer battery life. Because of the integration, the total footprint for the netbook platform has decreased by approximately 60 percent. For entry level desktop PCs, it's a nearly 70 percent reduction in footprint and about 50 percent lower TDP than the previous generation.
About the platform
The N450 is a single core Atom processor with 512k of L2 cache and a 7 watt total kit TDP including chipset. The D410 for entry-level desktop PCs is a single-core Atom processor with 512k of L2 cache and a 12-watt total kit TDP including chipset, and the D510 for entry-level desktop PCs is a dual core Atom processor with 1meg L2 cache and a 15-watt total kit TDP including chipset. The new chips all run at 1.66GHz. Pricing and availability will be announced in January as systems become available from OEMs.





















That pic reminds me of the ionic breeze
@yulebellow
Now your netbook can clean the air while running internet explorer for a full 10 hours! Call now!
who the fuck uses nettops and netbooks?
@your avatar
eeeeeeewwwweeeeee
@nigra
I'm trying to guess how long till you get banned.
@kris120890 take a guess i've been on here for quite a while now
@nigra
I guess no one is using the thousands of netbooks sold this year. (sarcasm).
Nettops on the other hand, I couldn't see myself using one of those as I'd always have the best desktop I could afford but I definitely have no problem using my netbook when I'm not home or my desktop is busy doing something.
@nigra The people who use nettops are the people who only do web surfing and emails. They don't need a Core 2 Octomum 10.2Ghz CPU being cooled by Jersey Cream.
The box can be tiny, almost silent, and use little energy. They will never need more power, so they might as well save money too.
How often do you need to re-encode HD video away from your house? Atoms cover the the majority of mobile user's needs, while driving down prices and significantly increasing power efficiency.
They're not meant to be your only computer. If you're somehow limited to a single purchase (money, space, etc), by all means, buy something better, but Atoms are great ancillary devices.
Well, since there is no performanceimprovements, I might as well get a good deal on an current model with ion...
M
@BigDaddyM
But ION2 will have performance improvements :D
@BigDaddyM
seriously. and the ion is probably more powerful than the integrated graphics anyway
@BigDaddyM
Atom/Ion or dual core Celeron???
@BigDaddyM
I am now thinking of a HP mini 311. It would be a very cheap ultraportable... but expensive netbook.
It doesn't seem Ion 2 will be available soon or even worth it for me since I only want 1080p playback... so I can use it as a super pmp... no games for me.
M
@BigDaddyM
wth is everybody talking about "no performance improvements"? even the next post, although the benches there show a 15% cpu and 50% gpu improvement in comparison to a n280 diamondville plattform.
also ion isnt gonna cut it either. yes, the gfx is (far) better than all of intels igps, but as you can see with the ion-eee 1201, price and especially runtime just arent right. in this case a thin and light a la timeline often is the better choice
@(Unverified)
Well I do not need longer battery life, 6 hours is already good. I prefer a smaller screen (the mini 311 is pretty awesome) and the size is small enough.
I just want smooth 1080P playback with a HDMI which makes a bad ass PMP.
I would have liked a noticable increase in power. Sure I do not need a workstation, but my friend's netbook seems to require a bit of patience.
Sure we all want endless batterys, super resolution oled and top nvidia gfx, but these new Atoms doesn't change the game.
M
@BigDaddyM yeah i was so waiting for the 311. It will do 720p no sweat, but apparently you'll get choppy 1080p. depends on the source. even via 1080p on the hdd will yield less than fluid performance, even though "technically" it is decoding 1080p, 720p will be the mainstay.
here's a link with an indepth look at 720p vs 1080p:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m5t55rTknms
I'll be looking for a cheaper 311 after CES2010. Hopefully it'll be a "runout" item and we'll snap up something cheap and just as good as the next crop.
gief benchmarks
anyone know what desktop computer/case that is?
@BrassBawls
If I'm correct its an In-Win BM639 Black.
Has a full sized 5.25" bay (for Blu-Ray :))
250Watt Flex ATX PSU
Space for 2 PCI with an extender
Hmmm.... and with the Pinetrail, intel can not have higher prices for a CPU without the video chip. Therefore the only price difference should be for the Ion itself for a basic netbook and a more capable netbook. In face, add a small cost on top of the Ion for the system and an Ion based netbook can do the boot up with the lower video for extreme battery life trick.
netbook without Ion is a joke anyway!
sorry but now, Intel graphics, I think not.
I will take LON for even something from ATI before I take an Intel graphic card
Intel graphics? Uh, no. Big stonkin' never. NVIDIA or ATI, I don't care. But NOT Intel.
no improvement over N2xx series? c'mon intel...CMON