An on-stage hug at Apple's World
Wide Developer Conference between Paul Otellini and
Steve Jobs, chief executives for Intel and Apple
respectively, sealed a landmark deal that will see Apple
computers starting to use Intel chips.
Before June 2006 the first Apple computers are scheduled to swap out their
Power PC chips from IBM with Intel processors. By 2007 Apple's full product line
will have switched to Intel's x86 chips.
A preview version of the new machines running a 3.6GHz Pentium 4 is set to
start shipping to a number of selected premier developers within two weeks.
The computers, running a preview version of OS X 10.4.1, are for development
purposes only and have to be returned to Apple by the end of next year.
Apple is changing platforms because IBM's Power chips could not deliver the
required computing muscle, Jobs told delegates at the developer event.
"We have some amazing products we want to build for you and we don't know how
to build them with the future Power PC roadmap," he said.
Power consumption was the most important reason for the switch, according to
Jobs, who explained that the Intel chips offer 366 per cent more performance per
watt than the Power PC architecture.
Another consideration was the need for greater clock speeds and faster
development. Apple promised last year to build a 3GHz PC, but Jobs admitted that
the company failed to deliver on that promise. He also complained that it took
IBM too long to create the next-generation G5 processor.
"Intel and Apple are a perfect fit," said Otellini during an appearance in
Jobs's keynote presentation. He added that Apple is known for its software and
hardware design, while Intel is known for advancing chipsets and processors.
"Our strengths are different but entirely complementary," he explained. "We
are most concerned about the relentless advance of Moore's
Law, delivering better machines year after year."
The change in architectures means that software has to be rewritten and
tested for the new systems running Intel, with the exception of
widgets and software written in
Java.
Apple has been developing and testing its OS X operating system for both
Power and Intel x86. To prove that the software exists and works, Jobs used a
Powermac running a 3.6GHz Pentium 4 and 2GB of memory for a demonstration during
his keynote.
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