Intel previews Pentium III

At a preview event to help launch its upcoming Pentium III processor, Intel was joined by a legion of software, hardware and content providers that have optimised products to take advantage of enhanced multimedia capabilities in the new chip.

Software makers Lotus Development, Microsoft and Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products, PC manufacturer Compaq and content providers Bloomberg and Excite were among more than 200 companies on hand to help Intel plug its new chip.

"Whether you're a consumer, a small business or a big business, the Pentium III will bring some capabilities that you haven't had before, and make the Pentium III user's experience a better one," said Craig Barrett, Intel's president and CEO.

By staging the event -- the biggest of its kind Intel has ever attempted -- the chip maker hopes to drive demand in advance of the official release of its processor on February 26. Initially the processor will appear only in higher-end -- and therefore more expensive -- systems, but will trickle down into more mainstream systems over time.

Launching the Pentium III has already proved to be problematic for Intel, in part because of its plans to include an individual identification number into the circuitry of each chip. While Intel and its partners say the unique ID number in each Pentium III will improve security, critics, including consumer rights advocates like the American Civil Liberties Union, have said it will provide online marketers, as well as more unscrupulous people, with a way to track users' movements on the Internet.

Officials here sought to downplay those fears today. Intel will "strongly advise" PC makers to ship their systems with the ID number disabled, Intel vice president Mike Aymar said. The company has also said it has developed a software program for Windows that allows users to turn the ID number on and off at will.

The Pentium III will debut in three speeds -- 450MHz, 500MHz and 550MHz -- Barrett said. Next month, the company will officially launch a version of the chip for servers and workstations -- the Pentium III Xeon -- which will be available at the same three clock speeds, he said.

Perhaps more important than the speed, the Pentium III includes a set of some 70 new processor instructions known as the Katmai New Instructions (KNI), which Intel says help its processor handle applications that feature speech, graphics, audio and video. Software and content makers can write applications that take advantage of those additional instructions.

The Pentium III will provide users with richer Internet experience even using standard analogue modems, and thus help drive growth of electronic commerce and other online services, Barrett said.

Excite has developed a 3-D version of its search engine which presents search results in a series of 3-D carousels spread about the screen. Users can rotate the carousels using the mouse pointer and click to open files.

While much of the Internet content shown wasn't greatly different from anything shown at other events, what was special, Barrett said, is the quality of content that users can get with the Pentium III over a standard 56K modem. With xDSL and other high-bandwidth technologies, the quality improves more, he said.

Intel has also shored up support from makers of business software. Since the Pentium III will be available initially only in pricey, high-performance desktops, analysts have said it will be important for Intel to attract business customers to help drive sales of its new chip.

IBM said it has optimised its ViaVoice product to work better with the Pentium III. The speech recognition program has been integrated with Lotus's SmartSuite Millennium Edition to allow users to operate applications like the Lotus 1-2-3 spreadsheet and the FastSite intranet publishing software using voice commands.

Meanwhile Network Associates said its Gauntlet Active Firewall software uses the identification number stamped into the circuitry of the Pentium III to identify networked devices and trigger alerts to network managers if there is a problem.

When Intel launches the Pentium III later this month, it will be accompanied by the biggest marketing blitz the company has launched yet, which will cost the company around $US300 million, Barrett said.

Intel rival AMD already has a similar multimedia-enhancing technology -- known as 3D!Now -- in its existing K6-2 processors. Analysts have said Intel's KNI may be slightly superior to AMD's 3D!Now for running certain types of applications, but Intel initially will offer KNI only in its highest performance chips, while AMD has been offering 3D!Now across its product line for some time.

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James Niccolai

PC World
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