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By Agam Shah, IDG News
Intel on Monday released a dual-core Atom N550 processor, which the company says will bring improved application and graphics performance to netbooks while retaining long battery life.
The Atom N550 processor is a big upgrade from previous processors in an Atom lineup that primarily consisted of single-core chips. The processor will operate at a speed of 1.5GHz, and include 1MB of cache.
The chip will be more responsive than single-core Atom processors, which go into most netbooks today, Intel said. Users will be able to run applications more rapidly and play back 720p video in netbooks that are as thin and light as existing models. Netbooks with the new chip will offer similar battery life as its single-core predecessors, the company said.
New netbooks will be offered by companies including Acer, Asus, Lenovo, Samsung, and Toshiba starting on Monday, the chip maker said. Details about the netbooks, including price and availability, were not be immediately available.
Netbooks are low-cost PCs characterized by small screens and small keyboards, and were designed primarily to surf the Internet and run basic applications like word processors. Though popular, netbooks have been heavily criticized for underperformance and poor graphics, due partly to the limited processing power of Atom chips.
The dual-core processor is an incremental improvement to previous Atoms,
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"As the technology progresses ... you'll even see dual-core processors showing up in [mobile] handsets,
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Netbook performance could catch up with that of laptops as a result, but may also temporarily create confusion among buyers,
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Intel's Celeron processor will perhaps take the biggest hit from any confusion, McCarron said. Celeron chips are at the bottom of Intel's lineup of mainstream laptop processors, and are typically found in low-end laptops with screens up to 15.6 inches.
Intel also had to bump up Atom's performance to stay ahead of rival Advanced Micro Devices,
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AMD will ship a low-power chip code-named Ontario,
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The Atom N550 will be made using a 45-nanometer manufacturing process and support DDR3 memory.
This won't be the first dual-core Atom processor. Intel earlier released the Atom 330 which reached a few laptops. The chip was based on a desktop processor design.