Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 24th Jan 2008 22:35 UTC
Hardware, Embedded Systems "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."
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The next generation...
by bornagainenguin on Fri 25th Jan 2008 00:39 UTC
bornagainenguin
Member since:
2005-08-07

That's what I'm interested in with these. I love the ASUS Eee but I've been holding off to see what the competition brings in now that ASUS has shown there is a market. I'm also hoping to see ASUS bring in a Eee model that doesn't come with the crippled 900mhz processor that's killing their battery life. Now at last with the impending release of this it looks like that may happen sooner than later.

--bornagainpenguin

RE: The next generation...
by lemur2 on Fri 25th Jan 2008 02:04 in reply to "The next generation..."
lemur2 Member since:
2007-02-17

That's what I'm interested in with these. I love the ASUS Eee but I've been holding off to see what the competition brings in now that ASUS has shown there is a market. I'm also hoping to see ASUS bring in a Eee model that doesn't come with the crippled 900mhz processor that's killing their battery life. Now at last with the impending release of this it looks like that may happen sooner than later. --bornagainpenguin


Combine a 22.5cm or 25cm (9 or 10 inches for behind-the-times Americans) low-power LCD 1024x640 widescreen (possibly one from Pixel Qi http://pixelqi.com/ ), a fast flash filesystem, some additional storage capacity and a full and popular GNU/Linux OS with a large application repository (perhaps Xubuntu or similar, or maybe even KDE4 would be quick enough), wireless mesh networking and one of these new Via processors could make a next-gen ASUS EEPC competitior machine a real game-changer.

Ultra-portable UMPC++ on a budget! Nice.

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 5

RE[2]: The next generation...
by renox on Fri 25th Jan 2008 09:31 in reply to "RE: The next generation..."
renox Member since:
2005-07-06

I was going to suggest the OLPC screen, but in fact the Pixel Qi is the 'OLPC spinoff' so it's the same thing.

But yes, I agree, a 10" OLPC-like screen, this new CPU, 512MB of RAM (upgradable), an Ethernet port, a 'second generation' (faster) SSD (upgradable), wireless meshing and the result is a killer small laptop.

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 4

RE: The next generation...
by bnolsen on Fri 25th Jan 2008 20:18 in reply to "The next generation..."
bnolsen 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

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 1

bornagainenguin Member since:
2005-08-07

The ASUS EEE cpu is NOT crippled.

It's a full blown Pentium3-M dotham processor with 512kb L2.


Ummm... did I blink again? Last time I checked the Eee used a 900 MHz Intel Celeron M ULV 353 which didn't seem to have very much mobility support and had to be underclocked to prevent issues...

--bornagainpenguin

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 2