This slide has been shown at the Intel Developer Day here in Berlin and I thought it would be worth sharing with you guys as It shows interesting specifications. Note the CPU (Lincroft, not Lincrof as on slide) speed from 900Mhz – 1.8Ghz, memory support and connectivity co-processor. (Langwell).
We’re trying our best to stream live at IDD over at MeetMobility.com (but struggling with bandwidth!)
Moorestown Detailed Architechture Diagram:
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Related posts:We’re Live from Berlin (Intel Dev Day – #… http://bit.ly/cfOioY
Moorestown Detailed Architechture Diagram http://bit.ly/ddVjzS
Yeah, good news.
I thought Moorestown was moving on to DDR3 ram. Most platforms are. I guess I was wrong about this? In truth, I’m not really much of a hardware technologies guy, but I sure would like to know what’s going on here, especially if there’s something fairly obvious that I’m missing.
I’m typically against saying “device X needs technology Y”, because the only thing that matter with a device, in so far as the underlying technology is concerned, is the user experience. In contrast, I think it’s completely appropriate to fret over the technologies (like DDR3 RAM) that are included in and excluded from technologies (like Moorestown). To that end, I’m sure that Moorestown-based devices aren’t going to be drastically affected by having DDR2 as opposed to DDR3 RAM, but technology only moves in one direction. DDR3 is already here, and DDR2 is sliding ever closer to legacy technology status. DDR3 RAM is faster, cheaper, lower power, and, most importantly, the future (and actually the present for a lot of platforms and devices).
This looks like solid stuff. Clearly, this isn’t your father’s Intel anymore. This is why competition in the marketplace is such a wonderful thing.
I think Oak trail will be moving to DDR3. Oak trail is the Windows-compatible version of Moorestown
Moorestown Detailed Architechture Diagram http://bit.ly/c6KodL