HomeAdd Ons Intel Takes on Mobility and Notebook Security
Intel Takes on Mobility and Notebook Security ByScott Ferguson 2008-08-20
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While most of the 2008 Intel Developer Forum focuses on Intel processors that will use the upcoming Nehalem microarchitecture, part of the forum also is looking ahead to what Intel will offer for both laptops and notebook security. Intel also introduced its first quad-core processors for laptops called the Core 2 Extreme QX9300 and the Core 2 Quad Q9100. In addition, Intel is expected to offer an anti-theft device for notebooks.
During his keynote address Aug. 19, Dadi Perlmutter, an Intel executive vice
president and general manager of the Mobile Platform Group, detailed the
company’s first quad-core processors for laptops and a new anti-theft device
and security protection for corporate notebooks.
Still, Perlmutter filled in some holes in the Intel processor lineup. The
most significant updates included the release of two quad-core processors for
laptops: the Intel Core 2 Extreme QX9300, which has a clock speed of 2.53GHz,
12MB of Level 2 cache and a 1066MHz front-side bus; and the Q9100, with a
2.26GHz clock speed and the same amount of L2 cache and FSB found in the
QX9300. The two mobile processors are based on the 45-nanometer manufacturing
process.
While four processing cores in a notebook could be considered overkill, Dell,
Hewlett-Packard
and Lenovo have each built new mobile workstations that use these quad-core
Intel chips.
Perlmutter also demonstrated the first notebooks to use Intel processors
based on the Nehalem architecture. The first mobile platform to use these
processors—“Calpella”—is slated for
release in 2009.
Intel
first hinted at what it calls its Anti-Theft Technology, or Intel AT, in April.
This anti-theft technology offers to secure laptops through several methods,
including the ability to encrypt the notebook’s hard disk drive. The technology
also allows the IT department to set up policies to protect passwords and
deliver a “poison pill” to a laptop in case of theft, turning the notebook into
what one Intel executive called a “brick.” If recovered, the IT department can
then retrieve the data that had been retained on the hard drive.
While Intel has put more emphasis on notebooks than on desktops, the chip
maker still has a significant stake in desktop PCs. In Perlmutter’s
presentation, one slide showed notebook shipments pushing toward 400 million
units by 2012. At the same time, desktop shipments were inching toward 200
million units.
“As a market watcher, I though that statistic was interesting to put up
there,” said Michael Feibus, an analyst with TechKnowledge Strategies. “In the
Intel forecast, they have desktop shipments growing through 2012, and it shows
that there still is a nugget there for Intel even though the desktop PC market
has slowed in the U.S.
and in Western Europe. There is still enough growth in
the desktop market to carry a load for Intel.”