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Remember when we told you how Intel's new Silvermont cores could power phones and tablets you might actually want? You'll find up to four of those cores in every piece of Bay Trail silicon.
Intel expects tablets containing its upcoming Atom processor code-named Bay Trail will cost under US$200, a company executive said Wednesday.
And with Bay Trail also likely to appear in budget laptops not far down the line you'll still be able to get your TF2 fix there too. First step on the road to proper PC gaming on a tablet? Maybe.
ASUS recently launched the MeMO Pad 7, a low cost Android tablet that is powered by an Intel quad-core Bay Trail Atom processor.
Dozens of tablets, some priced as low as $99, are expected out by year's end running the new Intel Atom processors, which began shipping Wednesday.
Intel's Bay Trail chip arriving on Android tablets in Q2 Chipmaker's tablet processor will come to Android tablets in the second quarter, says CEO Brian Krzanich.
Meanwhile, our main graphical benchmark also puts Bay Trail behind in 3D performance relative to the Snapdragon 800 -- a score that suggests Qualcomm retains the lead for gaming.
Intel aims at emerging markets with smartphone Atom processors, and Bay Trail Atoms will arrive after that, the company announces at CES 2013.
Intel’s first “Bay Trail” chips were designed for Windows, he said, but OEMs are readying a new wave of Android tablets.
Intel's just introduced a brand new quad-core Atom-based processor specifically meant for tablets, codenamed "Bay Trail." As you can see in the slide above, it's a 22nm chip that promises double ...
Bay Trail is expected to offer twice the performance of today’s Clover Trail chips, while allowing for tablets as thin as 0.3 inches.
Dozens of tablets, some priced as low as US$99, are expected out by year's end running on new Intel Atom processors, which began shipping Wednesday.
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