Telling it like it is on the inside of production semiconductors as seen at Chipworks



Friday, January 13, 2012

Intel Press Briefing and Keynote at CES 2012

Intel UltraHypes Ultrabook at Monday's Press Briefing

The Intel press session Monday morning at CES was focused exclusively on the Ultrabook, with Mooly Eden hyping up this supposedly new category of laptop. He prefaced the talk by saying there would be no discussion of 22 nm, Ivybridge, or any new silicon; the emphasis would be on "experiences" achieved by Ultrabook, not just speed and performance as Intel has done in most of the last few years.

Having said that, he went through an impressive array of the different applications that we use these toys for - games, internet, raw computing (as in graphics manipulation), and demonstrated the added security that they've built in since incorporating McAfee last year.
Mooly Eden and Associate at Intel CES Press Briefing
We then had a series of different versions of Ultrabooks, some of which were like the old HP systems where the screen could be flipped to turn it into a tablet (only these days with touchscreen). One of the most interesting had a small additional touchscreen on the lid, about 2" wide and the length of the laptop, so that it could be accessed without opening up and powering up the whole thing.  A concept  at the moment (Nikiski, I think it was called), but to me it had potential.

Of course, now that we are in the days of Apple's Siri, speech recognition has to be on the horizon, so Mooly announced a partnership with Nuance and their Dragon system, and brought out their CEO for a few minutes of mutual congratulation.

Gesture recognition is also the coming thing, so we had a demo of that,which evolved into a plug for the sheer computing power of the Sandybridge/Ivybridge parts and what they can do.  Apparently there are more than 75 Ultrabooks coming onto the market this year, with screen sizes from 11 - 15", and at "affordable" prices.

Then the VP of Marketing and Sales came onto the stage, and announced a change in marketing approach from speed and performance to experiences, as Mooly had said earlier. They will be doing a huge marketing campaign partnering with a whole lot of companies, more than just those branding the Ultrabooks. This will start in April - described as "epic', and "cinematic".

There was a mystical announcement made that Paul Otellini will have some significant statement to make at Tuesday's keynote, and then we got to the "piece de resistance" of the show.  Intel are "seeding" Ultrabooks to the media, and fifty lucky folks found white envelopes under their chairs, containing an Ultrabook - theirs to keep provided they play with them and write about the experience.  Needless to say, the room went crazy, and I wasn't one of the lucky ones! The rest of us do have a chance; apparently if we email ultrabookseeding@ogilvy.com with a good story on how we can promote Ultrabooks, they have some more to hand out.  We'll see!

So to sum up, Ultrabooks are going to happen bigtime this year according to Intel, and not entirely to my surprise, there was no talk of a launch of any 22-nm product.  I did ask one of the guys there if there was a launch date, but all he said was that there would a phased launch in the spring, based on application - I think we'll see mobile product coming out first.

Stay tuned for that one, as soon as we get analysis started we'll let you know!

CES Keynote:  Intel in Lenovo Phone and Tablet, Partners with Motorola Mobility

At Tuesday's CES keynote, Intel CEO Paul Otellini announced that there will be an Intel processor in a Lenovo phone, coming soon, and a new partnership with Motorola that will bring more Intel presence in the mobile arena.

After some initial preambles about the ubiquity of personal computing, and confirming that the 22-nm Ivybridge is now shipping (with a line-of-sight to 14 nm), we got to the first of the "mystical announcements", and he invited Liu Jun on to the stage. Liu is a Senior VP of Lenovo, and President of the Mobile Internet and Digital Home Group, and he came up to announce the launch of the Lenovo K800 smartphone, to be shipped in Q2 to China Unicom.  It's using a version of the Atom processor, has a 4.5", 720p screen, runs Android, and has 8 hours of talk time and 14 days standby time.

Liu Jun and Paul Otellini show off Lenovo K800 Smartphone, powered by Intel
Not too many other specs were discussed, so we'll have to wait until the phone surfaces in China for a more detailed look. Liu also briefly brought up a 10" tablet using a 32-nm Atom processor, but no extensive demo there.  There was an extensive demo of an Intel reference phone, which was impressive, but then one would expect it to be in a keynote talk. Later on there was also a brief showing of a reference tablet running Windows 8.

Next up was Sanjay Jha, Chairman/CEO of Motorola Mobility, and they announced a multi-year partnership focused on making Intel-based devices, with the first phones coming out in the second half of the year.

Now we get a sequence of visitors to the stage; first Chris Aubrey of Adidas, selling running shoes using an Intel-based video wall ( a big push for the Olympics in London), and then Jeff Clarke  of Dell, launching their XPS13 Ultrabook. This looks very sleek, and can be ordered now, available in February, which presumably means it's based on 32-nm Sandybridge, not 22-nm Ivybridge.
After some showing off of the laptop/tablet convertible that Mooly Eden had on Monday, a couple of Intel staffers traded apps on a pair of Ivybridge-based Ultrabooks, which at least proves that they are out there and I presume at least some OEMs are getting silicon.

The final visitor is Will.I.Am, talking about making music on an Ultrabook, writing a new song for every city while he's on a world tour to raise money for inner cities (at least I think that's what he said - he didn't exactly look comfortable on stage taking techie questions). He finishes by holding the Ultrabook on his shoulder and announcing "the Ultrabook is the new blaster!"

Will.I.Am looking out of place while clutching Ultrabook
Then a post-amble about the spread of transistors and computers and we're done - off the stage, no questions asked.  Summing up - Intel is getting into the mobile space (probably slower than they'd like), Ivybridge is coming, and watch out for Ultrabooks.

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