Intel Gets Pocket-Sized

According to today's New York Times, Intel plans to announce tomorrow its plans to bring the world the next stage of the World Wide Web: the "Internet in your pocket." At a developer event in China, the company, based in Santa Clara, Calif., will display a range of wireless Internet devices that Intel believes will fill a gap between smartphones and laptops. The company is hoping to capitalize on the success that Apple has had with its iPhone, which is one of the most popular mobile Web smartphones.Intel is calling the new computers Mobile Internet Devices, or MIDs, and claims that it will have a significant advantage over makers of chips for cellphones because the Intel version will be highly compatible with the company's laptop and desktop processors for which most Web software is written today.The first generation of Intel's MID technology will be aimed at data, not voice communications, leaving the company out of the market for smartphones. That has not damped the enthusiasm of Intel executives who foresee a proliferation of devices ranging from advanced ultracompact laptops to small, tablet-size devices that will be used for browsing the Web, navigation and Internet chat, rather than voice communications."What enables the innovation is the ability to bring over all the existing PC applications," said Anand Chandrasekher, general manager of the company's Ultra Mobility Group.... Intel’s strategy is moving the company toward a direct confrontation with Qualcomm, the San Diego-based chip maker that is also trying to deliver the wireless Internet on hand-held devices. The company, which refers to its strategy as "pocketable computing," is offering a competing chip that offers lower power consumption and which is aimed for devices that blend voice and Internet data."We need to deliver an Internet experience that is like the desktop," said Sanjay Jha, Qualcomm’s chief operating officer. "People are used to the Internet, and you can’t shortchange them."The new Intel mobile Internet strategy takes advantage of the company’s Atom microprocessor, which was announced in early March. The Atom will have performance roughly equivalent to laptop computers introduced four years ago, but will use little more than a half-a-watt to two-and-a-half watts of battery power. That is significantly lower than the 35 watts of power consumed by the company’s state-of-the-art microprocessors in today’s laptops.Click here to read the original story.