Intel cuts prices as 1.8GHz Celeron appears in Tokyo

Intel Corp. cut the prices of some of its Pentium 4, Mobile Pentium 4, Mobile Pentium III and Xeon processor chips on Sunday as an as-yet unannounced chip, a 1.8GHz version of its Celeron processor, appeared in Tokyo’s Akihabara electronics district.

Intel last launched a new Celeron processor on May 15, when it put a 1.7GHz version of the chip on sale. The chip features a faster front-side bus and is based on the same core as older Pentium 4 processors. However, it comes equipped with 128K bytes of Level 2 cache memory, which is half the capacity of previous Celeron and older P4 chips. This means the chip offers low performance, according to a PC World benchmark test.

The new 1.8GHz Celeron has a similar specification, with a 400MHz front-side bus and 128K-byte Level 2 cache, and appeared over the weekend at one store in Akihabara where it was on sale bundled with a motherboard for (US$125).

Intel is expected to officially announce the new chip sometime over the next few weeks.

While Tokyoites were picking up the new chip, Intel was cutting prices.

Intel’s latest cuts see up to 43 percent taken off the price of its flagship desktop processor, the Pentium 4. The current top-of-the-range 2.53GHz version, which was introduced on May 6, remains at US$637 while prices of all other chips in the range were reduced. For example, the 2.4GHz version with the new 533MHz front-side bus was cut from $562 to $400 while the bottom-of-the-range 1.7GHz version was reduced from $163 to $143. All prices are for chips direct from Intel in quantities of 1,000.

The largest price cuts percentage-wise were seen in the Mobile Pentium 4 range, where the price of the 1.8GHz chip fell from $637 to $348 and that of the 1.7GHz dropped by just over half, from $508 to $241. The Mobile Pentium III chips saw drops of between 9 percent and 18 percent.

Intel’s Xeon processors, which are aimed at use in servers, also saw price reductions. Like the Pentium 4 cuts, the fastest chip in the range was left unchanged while others were lowered. The 2.2GHz version of the chip saw its price cut from $465 to $262 and the price of other chips in the family was cut by between 10 percent and 27 percent.

http://www.intel.com/

Kuriko Miyake, Tokyo Correspondent, contributed to this story.

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