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This Week's x86 Headlines
All other stories and details below
TechInvestor Intel Will Idle Workers, Plants Temporarily
C/Net Chip price war leads to more AMD losses
The Register Loss hit AMD renegotiates loan terms
But it's just a precautionary measure, says company
Inter@ctive Investor AMD loses another $64 million in second quarter
C/Net Chromatic to lay off 50%
   
   
   
   

 

x86 Weekly News

Collected By Robert R. Collins

Week of July 6, 1998

Older News

July 10, 1998

Loss hit AMD renegotiates loan terms
But it's just a precautionary measure, says company

July 10, 1998
The Register

In the wake of stinging losses announced earlier this week AMD has renegotiated its credit deal with its banks. On Wednesday the company reported a net loss of $65 million, having been badly hit by R&D spend and poor demand for communications products.

According to the company it has met the terms of its loans in previous quarters, and the renegotiation of terms is simply a precautionary measure.

 

Intel to file reply to FTC complaint on Friday

By Lisa DiCarlo

July 9, 1998
PC Week Online

Intel Corp.'s battle with the Federal Trade Commission will take a few steps further starting Friday, when the two meet in a Washington courtroom to begin the discovery process and to set a date for trial proceedings.

Intel will also file a formal reply to the FTC's antitrust complaint, which was announced on June 8.

The FTC has charged Intel, of Santa Clara, Calif., with anti-competitive practices stemming from earlier patent infringement lawsuits with Compaq Computer Corp. and Digital Equipment Corp. and an ongoing dispute with Intergraph Corp.

 

AMD to use Applied's PVD tool in copper development for MPUs

July 10, 1998
Semiconductor Business News

Advanced Micro Devices Inc. here today said it will use equipment from Applied Materials Inc. to develop copper interconnect technology for AMD's next-generation microprocessors.

The Sunnyvale chip maker said it plans to base its new interconnect technology on a barrier layer of tantalum nitride (TaN) and a copper seed layer deposited with Applied Materials' Electra IMP physical vapor deposition (PVD) technology.

 

Chromatic to lay off 50%

By Michael Kanellos

July 9, 1998
C/Net

Chromatic Research is laying off approximately 50 percent of its workforce and will discontinue its Mpact media processor line, as the company struggles to survive in the competitive graphics chip arena.

The Sunnyvale, California, company, which specializes in programmable "media" processors that can handle 3D graphics, DVD playback, and modem functions, appears to be one of the first casualties in an industry-wide consolidation that analysts and even graphics chip executives predicted earlier this year. The market is overcrowded and few developers can command prices high enough to offset expensive development.

 
July 9, 1998

AMD loses another $64 million in second quarter

By Larry Barrett

July 8, 1998
Inter@ctive Investor

Advanced Micro Devices Inc. (NYSE: AMD) on Wednesday disappointed analysts yet again, posting a loss of $64.5 million, or 45 cents a share, on sales of $526 million in its second quarter. AMD shares closed unchanged at 18 ahead of the earnings report.

First Call consensus had expected the struggling chipmaker to report a loss of only 20 cents a share in the quarter.

"Weakening demand in the worldwide semiconductor industry, coupled with continued price pressures on flash memory products, produced a substantial decline in revenues from our non-microprocessor business units," said chief executive W.J. Sanders III in a prepared release.

See Today's Related Stories

Tough Market Conditions Hurt AMD

By Jennifer L. Baljko

July 9, 1998
Electronic Buyer's News

Kicking off financial reporting season, Advanced Micro Devices' bigger than expected earnings loss may foreshadow what's to come in the next few weeks as tough market conditions plague second quarter results.

Falling well below Wall Street's anticipations, the Sunnyvale, Calif. chip maker attributed the declines to weak demand, pricing pressures, Asian financial problems, and slower product transitions among customers - concerns that other semiconductor and electronics companies have cited for their expected lackluster quarter.

 

AMD walking microprocessor tightrope

By Michael Kanellos

July 8, 1998
C/Net

Sales of processors are way up at Advanced Micro Devices, but that's just part of the problem.

AMD, which announced larger-than-anticipated losses of 45 cents a share for the second quarter, is riding a wave of demand for its K6 and K6-2 microprocessors now used in low-cost PCs from vendors such as Compaq, IBM, and Hewlett-Packard. The K6 family sales jumped from 1.6 million units last quarter to 2.7 million this quarter, while between 500,000 to 1 million chips will be added in both the third and fourth quarters, according to CEO Jerry Sanders.

 

Chromatic ends Mpact development

By Margaret Kane

July 8, 1998
ZD Net News

Chromatic Research Inc. said today it has stopped development of its Mpact architecture, which was designed to combine multimedia functions on a single chip.

Instead, Chromatic will focus on a "new and unique" approach to media processing, although it would not give details of that architecture.

 
Today's Related Stories

AMD Losses More Than Double Forecasts

By Sergio G. Non

July 8, 1998
TechInvestor

The second quarter was tougher than Wall Street suspected for Advanced Micro Devices.

In results announced after market close Wednesday, AMD (company profile) reported a second quarter loss of $64.6 million, or 45 cents per share, more than double the First Call consensus of 20 cents per share in losses.

The chip maker said sales were $526 million, down 3 percent from the previous quarter and down 11 percent from the second quarter of 1997.

 

AMD reports $64.5 million loss; K6 sales only bright spot

ByWill Wade

July 8, 1998
Semiconductor Business News

Advanced Micro Devices Inc. here today reported a net loss of $64.5 million for the second quarter, as sales declined 3% from the previous quarter and 11% from the same quarter last year.

The only bright spot in the company's outlook was its line of microprocessors, which saw 35% sales growth over the first quarter and unit sales topping 2 million for the period. However, this is the company's fourth consecutive losing quarter.

"Our computation products group had an excellent quarter," noted W.J. (Jerry) Sanders, chairman and CEO. "However, this could not offset the weaker demand in our other areas, notably flash memory."

 

AMD posts a loss on falling sales

By Andy Santoni

July 8, 1998
InfoWorld Electric

Despite substantial growth in sales of its K6 processors, Advanced Micro Devices on Wednesday reported a net loss on lower sales for its second quarter, ended June 28.

The company lost $64.56 million, or 45 cents per share, on sales of $526.54 million this year, compared with a net income of $9.97 million, or seven cents per share, on sales of $594.56 million in the same quarter last year.

Sales declined by 3 percent from the immediately prior quarter, and by 11 percent from the second quarter of 1997.

 

AMD turns in big loss
Core business shows drop in sales

July 9, 1998
The Register

AMD has made a loss of $64.6 million in its second quarter, but its figures show that sales of its K6 processors have risen.

The company turned over $526.5 million in the quarter, compared with $594.6 million in the same period a year ago.

While sales of the K6 rose by 26 per cent in the quarter, a more worrying trend for AMD is that elements of its core business declined significantly.

 
July 8, 1998

Chip price war leads to more AMD losses

By Michael Kanellos

July 8, 1998
C/Net

Despite a year featuring new deals with major computer vendors, increased sales, and improved manufacturing, chipmaker Advanced Micro Devices is expected to report its fourth consecutive quarterly loss today, and hopes of recovery do not seem to be on the horizon.

The loss is expected to be 20 cents a share, according to a consensus of 24 analysts on First Call. Estimates range from a loss of 38 cents to a loss of two cents. A loss of 29 cents per share is expected for the year.

 

New design twists await Xeon systems builders

By Alexander Wolfe

July 7, 1998
EE Times

Hidden amid the fanfare surrounding the launch last month of Intel Corp.'s powerful Xeon processor are a host of technical surprises that will pose new challenges for systems designers. As a result, even seasoned engineers will have to delve into some unfamiliar territory before they declare their latest workstations and servers ready for release to manufacturing.

"The Pentium II was designed for a maximum of two CPUs in a system, while Xeon was designed for a maximum of four, so you really have to step up some of the design constraints," explained Gary Thome, manager of design engineering for Compaq Computer Corp.'s workstation division. "The other thing is that Xeon has larger and faster caches, which can draw more current."

 
July 7, 1998

Merced won't decisively alter OS landscape, analysts say

By Rebecca Sykes

July 6, 1998
InfoWorld Electric

The OS battle between Windows NT and various flavors of Unix will not be significantly altered by the introduction of Intel's 64-bit chip Merced in mid-2000, according to a number of analysts.

Microsoft is working to make its Windows NT operating system run on Intel's 64-bit chip, and most Unix vendors have pledged that their Unix operating systems, some of which have run for several years on their own proprietary 64-bit chips, will work on Merced as well.

But Windows NT powered by 64-bit Merced will not necessarily give Windows the muscle it needs to jump from its stronghold on desktops and departmental servers into Unix's traditional space at the high-end, analysts said. In fact, Merced may instead give the Unix operating system a slight boost over Windows, because Merced will bring to Unix the lower-cost benefits of a commodity -- standard industry hardware architecture -- they said.

 

Advanced chipmaking on the way

By Reuters

July 6, 1998
C/Net

In October, Canon will start shipments of semiconductor production equipment capable of making the most densely packed circuits to date.

The new "stepper," capable of etching semiconductor circuits finer than 0.18 microns, is designed for volume production of next-generation 256-megabit DRAM (dynamic random access memory) chips and also microprocessors on either 200-mm or 300-mm wafers, Canon said in a statement. Memory chips holding 256-megabits of data will pave the way for PCs that come standard with as much as 512 megabytes (MB) of memory, while larger wafers allow more chips to be packed onto production silicon.

 

Attack of the 300MHz Celerons

By Roger C. Lanctot

Juley 6, 1998
Computer Retail Week

While nearly half of the computers advertised by national retailers this past weekend had retail prices of $1,999 or higher, it was the low-cost 300MHz Celeron-based systems that were making waves. Although Micro Center had the lowest-priced 300MHz Celeron system at $799 under its PowerSpec brand, Best Buy had the hottest bundle with an Acer 2856 300MHz Celeron system with 15" monitor and Canon BJC-250 inkjet printer at $1,199.70.  

High-end portables for Win 98

By Kurt Oeler

July 6, 1998
C/Net

Prices on top-line notebooks sporting Windows 98 are heading south, led by Intel price cuts and new Compaq Computer models incorporating processors from Advanced Micro Devices (AMD).

Two fully-loaded Compaq Presario consumer models using AMD's 266-MHz K6 chip have dipped below $2,500, while IBM, Gateway, and Compaq are shipping 266-MHz Pentium II models at prices below $3,000.

 
July 6, 1998

Intel Will Idle Workers, Plants Temporarily

By Sergio G. Non

July 2, 1998
TechInvestor

About 1,700 Intel workers will be temporarily suspended for nine days in July when the company idles two plants to get rid of excess chips.

The Santa Clara, Calif.-based chip maker said two Oregon plants will be shut down next month. Facilities that use older technology -- the two fabs in question are equipped with 0.5 micron and 0.35 micron processes -- are put in "warm down" when Intel decides to upgrade them, spokesman Chuck Mulloy said.

 

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