home

Articles

Blog

Books

Tools

Links

FAQ Page


Intels Tri-mode Chip

Google
 
Web www.software-risk.co.uk

Intel today launched its first chipset capable of supporting all three "wi-fi" wireless networking.

The company moved into communication chips in the late 1990's however until now, faced strong competition and product delays. As a consequence Intel has lagged behind competitors Broadcom and Texas Instruments.

An operating loss of $345m on revenues of $2.3bn was posted by the Communication Chips division for the first half of this year.

802.11a, 802.11ba and 802.11g will all be supported by the new Centrino chipset. Currently the most common Wi-Fi connection is 802.11b for public areas.

Corporate offices however are moving towards 802.11g. Home networks are towards 802.11a. A laptop user may have to use all three if she is on the move a lot.

The "tri-mode" chip will not produce a huge sales leap. The improvement in technology means the company might win business from mobile phone makers.

Related Articles
Chip Sales to Surge
AMD Ramps Up With New Fab
PC
Intel Talks Laptops
Intel Quarterly $9.2bn Record Revenue
Clearing House Interbank Payments System (CHIPS)
CHIPS
Pentium D Pricing

Similar Areas

Wireless Items

Networks Items

Hardware Items

Selected Books

Keywords

Intel

Texas Instruments

Broadcom

wi-fi

wireless

communications

chip

chips

chipset

802.11a

802.11b

802.11g

Centrino

PC

laptop


See our Sarbanes-Oxley compliance, load testing and Financial Glossary pages.
Articles   Books   FAQ Page   home   Jobs   Links   Reviews Page   Tools  
Booklist   books   Measurement   Testing   Tools