Philippine Daily Inquirer
10:14 pm | Sunday, September 18th, 2011
Over the past several years, Intel has been expanding into the mobile devices space, which is growing more rapidly than personal computers.
Intel’s partnership with Google, whose Android is now the most widely used mobile operating system, is expected to accelerate the Santa Clara-based chipmaker’s stalled presence in the smartphone and tablet space.
Intel president and CEO Paul Otellini said smartphones powered by Intel’s Atom chips and running on Android OS would be available in the first half of next year.
The two tech titans will work together to optimize future versions of Android for Intel’s family of low-power Atom processors. This means that future versions of the Android platform will support Intel technology, in addition to other architectures.
“Combining Android with Intel’s low power smartphone roadmap opens up
more opportunity for innovation and choice,” said Andy Rubin, senior
vice president at Mobile at Google. “This collaboration will drive the
Android ecosystem forward.”
According to Otellini, “by optimizing the Android platform for Intel architecture, we bring a powerful new capability to the market that will accelerate more industry adoption and choice.”
Intel’s processor roadmap has now gone into the 22 nm microarchitecture technology with the introduction of thin notebooks called “Ultrabooks.”
The devices are ultrathin powerful notebooks capable of all-day computing with a single battery charge. The Ultrabook also offers 10 days of connected standby battery life.
The device is powered by Intel’s next-generation microprocessor called “Haswell” and it will hit the shelves next year.
Otellini said the Haswell project is a result of the company’s obsession with power reduction.
He predicted the microprocessor platform power innovation will reach levels that are difficult to imagine today.
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