Intel's
quad-core processors have officially hit the marketplace, after being
first
demonstrated in September at the Intel Developer Forum.
The chip giant announced pricing and availability for four Xeon 5300
processors, as well as the Core 2 Extreme.
The Xeon chips range from 1.60GHz to 2.66GHz. Three have 80W of power
consumption, while the 2.66GHz model consumes 120W.
Intel also released its Core 2 Extreme QX6700, a 2.66GHz quad-core consumer
model
targeted
at gamers and home users running multimedia-heavy applications.
Dell and
HP have introduced
quad-core machines to accompany Intel's new chips.
HP announced nine new models in its ProLiant server series that run on Xeon
5300s, including tower-based, rack-mount and blade server models.
The vendor claims that the new models will provide a 48 per cent performance
increase over its previous server offerings.
HP also rolled out a pair of desktop PCs that run on the new Intel chips, one
using an Xeon 5300 and the other a QX6700.
Dell's quad-core PC is targeted specifically at gamers. The XPS 710 has the
QX6700 chip as well as four memory slots, four hard drive bays, two optical
drive bays and seven slots for expansion cards.
The XPS 710 also has a new chassis design which Dell said was inspired by a
jet engine.
HP's quad-core models range from $2,039 to $3,739. The Dell gaming machine
starts at $3,699.
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