Monday, July 4th 2011
Intel Intros New Celeron M 857 ULV Processor
Intel updated its product offer to OEMs with a new low-cost ultra-low voltage (ULV) processor, the Intel Celeron M 857. The chip is designed for use in ultra-portable notebooks. Built on the 32 nm processor node, this dual-core chip is clocked at 1.20 GHz, lacks HyperThreading, has 2 MB of shared L3 cache, dual-channel DDR3 IMC, and embedded graphics. The chip has a TDP of just 17W. Celeron M 857 has the same channel price as Celeron M 847, $134, which it displaces.
Source:
TechConnect Magazine
21 Comments on Intel Intros New Celeron M 857 ULV Processor
celeron
But, I heard the Z-series can :D
I see Red_machine's point though, Intel just need the Core iX names rather than still cling on the Pentium and Celeron. Just call them i1 for simplicity.
hell i forgot AMD consumes lesser power too :D
i hope angry birds works okay here, i was playing it on an i3 laptop, used alt+F4 and then had to restart it LOL.
This one doesn't come with the run of the mill GPU like that of the HD2000/3000 order. This one only supports dual displays. Forget Quicksync, 3D, Clear Video, etc. The only thing it has going for it is the 1Ghz ceiling on the GPU clock. Though as Intel has yet to figure out that having a GPU clock all over the place is determinant to performance, I'm not expecting miracles.
You right this is not going in to netbooks, but it is aimed at the ultra portable market which is one that Bobcat still has reign over until you get to the actual i-series processors or some of the faster Pentium Sandy Bridge series processors. I'd even take the new AMD A-series (once the dual cores show up) over any Sandy Bridge based Celeron or Pentium.