Intel Corp, the biggest semiconductor maker, started selling seven smaller, faster new microprocessors for notebook personal computers and cut prices as much as 30 percent on older models.
The new chips are built using Intel's most advanced fabrication technique, called 0.13 micron. The processors consume less power than previous versions and produce less heat, the company said.
The processors represent the completion of Intel's transition to the new chipmaking method for all its products aimed at the mobile PC market. Intel has been pushing to make smaller, faster and less power-hungry chips to stay ahead of such rivals as Transmeta Corp and Advanced Micro Devices Inc.
Intel yesterday reduced prices 15 percent to 30 percent for older mobile processors. The 1.2 gigahertz Mobile Pentium III will sell for US$508 in batches of 1,000, down 30 percent from US$722, the company said on its Web site. An 866 megahertz Mobile Celeron fell 15 percent, to US$91 from US$107.
Intel says it is the only chipmaker using the 0.13 micron process, which is a measure of the average size of components on the chip, including the transistors and the connections between them.
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