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Apple Unveils Desktop and Laptop With Intel Chips / Move to Processors By Once-Shunned Maker Sooner Than Expected

Posted on: Monday, 6 March 2006, 12:00 CST

Apple Computer Inc.'s shift to Intel Corp. microprocessors came months earlier than expected yesterday as CEO Steve Jobs unveiled desktop and notebook computers based on Intel's new two-brained chips.

The first Macs to deploy Intel's Core Duo processors will be the latest iMac desktop, whose circuitry is built into the display, and the MacBook Pro laptop.

When it announced the switch in June, Apple said it expected to begin making the transition by mid-2006.

Yesterday, Apple CEO Steve Jobs was joined at the Macworld expo by Intel CEO Paul Otellini to unveil the new jointly designed computers.

Otellini came onstage wearing a cleanroom suit that the chip company has famously used in its ad campaigns - and that Apple once lampooned in its ads of its own.

For years, Apple shunned Intel, which has provided chips that power a majority of the world's PCs, along with Windows software from Microsoft Corp.

In the late 1990s, Apple even ran TV ads with a Pentium II glued to a snail and others featuring a toasted cleanroom suit.

But Apple, looking for faster, more energy-efficient chips, became increasingly frustrated in recent years as its chip suppliers, IBM Corp. and Motorola Corp.'s spinoff, Freescale Semiconductor Inc., failed to meet its needs.

Of particular concern was IBM's apparent inability to develop a G5 chip that would work well in notebook computers.

Intel, however, has been focusing on developing chips specifically tailored for notebooks. In 2003, it launched its Centrino notebook technology with a processor that boosted a longer battery life by minimizing its power demand without a major hit to performance.

During last week's International Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Intel unveiled the latest generation, the Core Duo, which features two computing engines on a single piece of silicon.

It was that chip that the Apple decided to fit into the new iMac.

The new iMacs will have the same all-in-one design as previous models and will be available with 17-inch and 20-inch screens for $1,299 and $1,699. Jobs claimed the new models are two to three times faster than the iMac G5, based on an IBM chip.

The MacBooks Pros start at $1,999.

Staff writer Jeffrey Kelley contributed to this report.

ILLUSTRATION: PHOTO


Source: Richmond Times - Dispatch

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