
"VIA's newly launched processor architecture, known for the last three years by its codename, "Isaiah," will keep the company's focus on cost and power intact while taking things in a substantially different direction. In short, this year will see something truly odd happen on the low end of the x86 market: VIA and Intel will, architecturally speaking, switch places. Intel will take a giant step down the power/performance ladder with the debut of Silverthorne/Diamondville, its first in-order x86 processor design since the original Pentium, while VIA will attempt to move up into Intel's territory with its first-ever out-of-order, fully buzzword-compliant processor, codenamed Isaiah. In this brief article, I'll give an
overview of Isaiah and of what VIA hopes to accomplish with this new design. Most of the high-level details of Isaiah have been known since at least 2004, when VIA began publicizing the forthcoming processor's general feature list (i.e., 64-bit support, out-of-order execution, vector processing, memory disambiguation, and others). So I'll focus here on a recap of those features and on a broader look at the market that VIA is headed into."
Member since:
2006-01-06
The ASUS EEE cpu is NOT crippled.
It's a full blown Pentium3-M dotham processor with 512kb L2.
Very good processor and I believe blows away any via cpu produced clock per clock. The EEE uses at most 18W at the wall.
Really I'd like to see something more like a 1GHz Ti OMAP SOC with powerVR in the EEE which should push battery life to over 10+ hours. ARM might not be exactly right for a full use computer though.
Edited 2008-01-25 20:27 UTC