No WiFi In 'Grantsdale' Chipset 166
bizpile writes "A company spokesman confirmed Friday, Intel has decided not to enable the wireless access-point functionality in its 'Grantsdale" chipset. Intel decided not to include this feature because of the proliferation of cheap wireless access points. Spokesman Dan Snyder said, 'So many wireless APs are out there, and they're essentially free" when purchased in conjunction with DSL or cable service from an ISP. The company may still develop a custom chipset to re-enable the WiFi functionality if a large customer requests it. Also, their Centrino plans and production will be unchanged."
large? (Score:5, Funny)
7'2" 300 lbs... do I count?
Re:large? (Score:5, Funny)
We're sorry, you must be at least this* high to re-enable the WiFi.
Please come again when you are taller.
- The Management
* - 7'3"
Re:large? (Score:2, Funny)
Moff Intel: "I assure you, Lord Customer, my engineers are working as fast as they can."
Darth Customer: "Perhaps I can find new ways to motivate them."
Good (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Good (Score:2)
less features enabled that are though actually built into the thing == good? really? like the 486 sx was a good idea?
Re:Good .... Makes me want to SCREAM... (Score:2, Interesting)
And even the article is unclear about being either the Access Point component or the 802.11x in the chipset.
My guess is that they are leaving a feature connector attached for a third party WIFI card, and disabling the Access Point features.
Which means absolutly nothing. The third party WIFI card can act as an Access Point.
Can a daughter card providing WIFI be considered part of the chipset (ala Centrino)?
I really wish article authors could show an attempt to clarify ideas.
Rushed? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Rushed? (Score:5, Insightful)
I really haven't had any problems with existing WAPs.
Re:Rushed? (Score:2)
Re:Rushed? (Score:2)
Re:Rushed? (Score:2)
Re:Rushed? (Score:2)
Re:Rushed? (Score:2)
Re:Rushed? (Score:2)
Some math on an access point. vs. PC firewall (Score:5, Insightful)
I'll assume you already have a low-end PC for use "Free", e.g. already paid for and with a market value near zero.
I will also assume you can configure it to spin down the HD and turn off the monitor. We'll say this is around ~30W; it's actually much less if your processor is idle. My via c3 backup server consumes about 14W, the firewall a little more, an older 486 at around 20W.
Let's stick with 30W. To be a fair comparison, it needs to run a wireless card. That's not a major addition to power, but we'll account for it.
30W is 0.003 kW, so per day, this device costs 0.72kWh x $0.15/kWh = $0.108/day. Per year electricity cost would be roughly $40.
An access point costs about $150 in my parts; I'll say you can get it for $100 for the sake of arguement though.
At 12W, using the above calculations again, this access point takes 40% of the power. Or, a yearly power bill of about $16. The difference in the power bills is $24.
So it would take about 4 years to catch up, assuming the access point doesn't die. I have enough spare parts and obsolete hardware to run a firewall indefinately for no extra expense. The PC based firewall can do a lot more stuff too - much more configurable, patchable, can run other servers, etc etc. I run OpenBSD on mine and find it more than adequate. Plus, unlike every access point I've seen in the $100 range, my ages-old USR modem I bought 10 years ago sits there doing it's job shuffling bits around. No DSL in these parts.
At best I'd consider it a draw. You add a little polution, but can save that firewall computer from ending up as toxic waste, too.
Myself, I run an access point and a firewall. I don't like trusting one device to do everything, and I know the firewall is very hard to beat.
Re:Some math on an access point. vs. PC firewall (Score:2)
There's really no reason to run a general purpose machine for the wireless gateway on an ordinary network. Even if you're going to have a dedicated gateway, you can use a wireless router with the routing functionality turned off.
Re:Some math on an access point. vs. PC firewall (Score:3, Interesting)
The first thing, is that the device is unable to keep a tcp connection open, and drops it (which is a pain in the rear end if you're remotely hacking something on a box behind said gateway)
The web interface to the firewall is braindead at best, doesn't even do SSL (so that anyone can look at the gateway's admin password, there supposedly is a telnet interface (riiiight, telnet...) and no SSH into the thing.
The firewall setup itself is so braindead that it d
Re:Some math on an access point. vs. PC firewall (Score:2)
Re:Some math on an access point. vs. PC firewall (Score:2)
Re:Some math on an access point. vs. PC firewall (Score:2)
Re:Some math on an access point. vs. PC firewall (Score:2)
Re:Some math on an access point. vs. PC firewall (Score:3, Interesting)
Within a few years this new hardware you buy now would be back to that near-zero market value. But by then Wifi APs will likely be much cheaper than $100. Also the power consumption of the
Re:Some math on an access point. vs. PC firewall (Score:2)
Might I suggest that `in your parts' must translate to `in that place in the mall where the owner giggles as he takes my money'.
Even over here in the Uk where electronics are very expensive I saw one the other day for 33 quid - $60.
Re:Some math on an access point. vs. PC firewall (Score:2)
Re:Some math on an access point. vs. PC firewall (Score:2)
If you don't have a wireless NIC in your machine as well, that's more cost - another $150 CDN for the cheapest I've seen. So with wireless PCI NICs running at twice the price of a wireless router, I'm pretty convinced.
The access point is also smaller, easier to store somewhere with good signal, is easily relocated without unplugging, produc
Re:Rushed? (Score:2)
Because! It's fun editing configuration files, hunting for compatible drivers, and testing it over and over until you get the silly thing to work.
I once spent hours trying to setup a firewire on a linux box, but in retrospect, I probably would have save a great deal of agony just purchasing a hardware router/firewall.
Re:Rushed? (Score:2)
(emphasis mine).
Perhaps you were looking up the wrong docs?
Re:Rushed? (Score:2)
Re:Never mind nonessential (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Never mind nonessential (Score:3, Informative)
I'm not sure why a desktop needs wireless though, usually I figure if it is a desktop, it will stay where it is for a while and it is worth wiring it so I'd get good bandwidth.
Convenience. A lot of people don't want to deal with or are too stupid to deal with wires; using wireless for your desktop allows you to use the same network appliance for your desktop and laptop even if the appliance lacks ethernet out; and some people don't have all the desktop computers in their hom
Re:Never mind nonessential (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Never mind nonessential (Score:2, Interesting)
I work out of my home for a company a couple provinces away. They have provided me with a high-end nortel VoIP phone which works great when my laptop is wired into my network.
If I try and make the connection travel over the WAP, it introduces quite a lot of popping and dropped words due to lost/out-of-order packets.
So in some cases wired does make the difference.
Re:Never mind nonessential (Score:2)
I'm looking at upgrading to gigabit.
Re:Never mind nonessential (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm not entirely convinced about the bandwidth argument either. Duplex or not, a cheap 11Mbps wireless still has more bandwidth than a 3Mbps cable internet connection, so the narrow pipe is obviously not the wireless.
Re:Never mind nonessential (Score:2)
I move gigabytes of data around, so I'm still leary of going wireless in my apartment, besides my concerns about hacking and securing it. After all, there's about 30 other people that live within the range of the antenna.
Re:Never mind nonessential (Score:3, Insightful)
I prefer the cat 5e, but don't mind having 802.11x built in for occasional convenience.
as far as security is concerned, just a couple of important measures should keep you pretty safe.
1)a.) Use a unique SSID (out of the box it's going to be linksys, mshome, or default - get rid of that pro
Re:Never mind nonessential (Score:2)
Side note: SP2 breaks D-Link PCI G cards. Yay MS.
sensationalism (Score:5, Insightful)
Essentially free? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Essentially free? (Score:2)
It's a bad example, but my DSL ISP [cincinnatibell.com] did charge. They are now running a promotional offer though.
Thing is, you need to pay for "professional" installation to get 'free' which costs 100 bucks, and isn't needed. Now the DSL modem is USB compatible and comes with a step by step CD. They used to charge for installation of the AP and an equipment fee every month.
Re:Essentially free? Mine was (Score:2)
It was a $50.00 instant rebate with a $50.00 mailin rebate on a $99.00 router.
The rebate came in 4 weeks.
So NET I paid the tax on $50.00 or $7.50. Free and the goverment still gets it's cut.
And the router works and there is a linux distro for it too.
Re:Essentially free? (Score:2)
Josh.
Re:Essentially free? (Score:2)
and usb cards are around the same, but that doesn't mean that it makes sense to leave it out of the motherboard, especially when you have usb engineered into the chipset anyways..
Re:Essentially free? (Score:2)
Re:Essentially free? (Score:2)
thats a 802.11G card for $15. Yes its really G. No i dont know if it runs on linux but it does run fine on windows once the drivers are installed. And yes that website DOES shit internationally.
also check out the USB one for $17:
http://shop1.outpost.com/product/4056582 [outpost.com]
PCMCIA wireless card for $15:
http://shop1.outpost.com/product/4056562 [outpost.com]
and the wireless G router for $25:
http://shop1.outpost.com/product/4056592/ [outpost.com]
Re:Essentially free? (Score:2)
As much as I want to stay out of your country, cheap broadband and hardware IS attractive.
Re:Essentially free? (Score:2)
And yes that website DOES shit internationally.
Just curious- don't mean to be nitpicking about spelling, but did you mean "ship"? It brings a whole different meaning to what you just said.
Costs? (Score:5, Interesting)
Hate to be suggesting monopolistic marketing ideas, but Intel can really get a lot of their wireless AP into computers by bundling it.
Re:Costs? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Costs? (Score:2)
A Wi-Fi deployment would just consist of deploying access-point control software to all your desktops. Then you'd have virtually no dead-zones as a laptop just needs to be within 100 yards of a desktop somewhere. No need for extra hardware. I'm sure that with software you could add real authentication as well.
Just a thought. I'm sure it wouldn't replace the need for at least a few access points in obscure locations or in places like cafeterias t
Re:Costs? (Score:2)
So in theory it *should* work, and its a great idea. In practice, at present, I think it would be a nightmare.
Re:Costs? (Score:2)
They are too busy.... (Score:2, Funny)
Kidding! ;)
Re:They are too busy.... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:They are too busy.... (Score:2)
anyone remember back when the original athlon came out?
the amd reference chipset that was on the first boards may not have been extremely feature-packed, but it was rock solid.. i wish they'd make more!
Why WAP - why not wifi adapter instead? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Why WAP - why not wifi adapter instead? (Score:2)
Re:Why WAP - why not wifi adapter instead? (Score:2)
Re:Why WAP - why not wifi adapter instead? (Score:2)
I've heard of some of those crazy, long-bearded types that use desktops as routers. I think they use those two weird operating systems, "Linux" and "BSD"...
steve
It's the 486 all over again (Score:5, Interesting)
The whole thing seemed like a test of how gullible their customers were. It looks like they're doing the same thing again.
Jason
ProfQuotes [profquotes.com]
Re:It's the 486 all over again (Score:2)
Re:It's the 486 all over again (Score:2, Informative)
Back in the DOS days, very few business apps needed a FPU, so it was a fair tradeoff for some customers.
Gaming killed the SX (Score:2)
And then the 3D FPS was invented. DOOM and QUAKE really needed that FPU to work properly (QUAKE required one, IIRC). That's the real reason the FPU made it's way back into the mainstream chips, gaming made it a must-have.
Before that, the FPU only made a difference if you were doing SERIOUS number crunching, and I'm not talking about excel.
Re:Gaming killed the SX (Score:3, Informative)
NO game of the 486sx are needed FPU. Not doom, not Duke nukem 3d, not Rise of the Triad,... They all didnt even SUPPORT fpu ops, because at that time even the 487 was much slower than integer math and look up tables (4cyle add and 15 or so cycle mul if i remember correctly)
Re:Gaming killed the SX (Score:2)
I do find it funny that Rise of the Triad displays, "Buy a 486!" if you have the screen set really small. I guess it's a case in point as to games not needing FPUs.
Re:Gaming killed the SX (Score:2)
Too bad i always crashed with high realism, so i never used it
Re:Gaming killed the SX (Score:2)
Re:Gaming killed the SX (Score:2)
I think Quake was helped because of the 486DX, before 486, the x87 chip was a separate chip and rarely sold to consumers in a consumer computer, it was often an extra $100 or something like that. I remember back in the 286 & 386 days when I insisted on the x87 (or math coprocessor) because I played with CAD and even programmed a few 3D wireframe vector programs that I wrote.
Re:It's the 486 all over again (Score:2)
The 486SX sold so well that Intel made a new mask that removed the FPU entirely. This increased the yield per wafer.
Re:It's the 486 all over again (Score:2)
Also, having the SX chip around allowed us to standardize our hardware around 486 motherboards, which made selecting components and planning for upgrades on our corporate fleet much easier.
Later on as our 'power users' were upgraded to pentiums, their DX2 chips and RAM would move down the line, and took about five minutes to slap into an existing box.
It was not entirely a bad thing.
Re:It's the 486 all over again (Score:2)
BTW: wasn't that the 1st time AMD spanked Intel?
Re:It's the 486 all over again (Score:2)
Of course, "cheaper" is relative. It was $340 for the CPU, $200 for the MB, and $800 for 16 meg of memory.
I'd bought 2 4-meg simms for $400 only to find out the 32-bit 386 needed 4 sticks, so I could pay a 20% restocking charge on the 4-megs and buy 4 1-megs or buy 2 more 4-megs.
Re:It's the 486 all over again (Score:4, Informative)
However, the later AMD-based 386DX boards that were cheap used surface-mounted CPU's and from an upgrade-sense were foobar. The ones that were socketed could be upgraded to a Cyrix chip that was often a nightmare, between having to use utilities in the autoexec to enable the L1 cache, and having previously stable systems decide they would start locking up at random.
A 486SX-33 on a board with 256KB cache and VL-Bus slots would cream it, though, and had a very sweet upgrade path.
Once AMD had their 486's on the market, a lot of those boxen that didn't get hand-me-down intel DX2's got the (very affordable) AMD DX2-66.
Going that route and buying high-quality motherboards was a major win. They could have had a third round of CPU upgrades, but the price/performance ratio on the Intel 'overdrive' CPU's was just too pathetic.
Re:It's the 486 all over again (Score:2)
I wish it was because for a while, back when I was a kid, we were going to upgrade our 286 (at 13 MHz I think) to a 486/33. I think we decided to go for a cheaper 386 DX/40 MHz instead. Doom was barely playable on it when it came out. I even tried Doom on a 486SX/33 laptop and got to see it run about twice as fast. The 386 was the main computer for about five years, too. Shame. Luckily, we upgraded to a Pentium 133 just in time for QTest (the test release of
Large customers? (Score:4, Funny)
Dumb question (Score:5, Interesting)
When Intel says they're "disabling" this, do they mean they're going to be physically leaving it out, or permanently disabling it, or just deactivating a jumper or something? By which I mean, could overclockers re-enable the feature on chips they possessed themselves if they really, really wanted to?
Re:Dumb question (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Dumb question (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Dumb question (Score:2)
battery friendly? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:battery friendly? (Score:2)
CPUs are big giants, and even if they can handle the processing quickly and go back to sleep, there's a lot more things going on in these things than there needs to be for simple wifi processing (floating point unit, large cache, large DRAM intefaces etc.)
The DSPs in wifi chip sets are well suited for the job. They can easily act as a first line of processing and determine if an incoming packet requires waking the main processor. T
Re:battery friendly? (Score:3, Informative)
Grantsdale is a derivitave of the Northwood process used to make the majority of P4's (I work at Intel, trust me on the product evolution here...). Grantsdale was certainly not intended to be soley laptop-grade chipsets, in fact, it is intended to be in high-end desktops, boasting the 7.1 Dolby sound, GigE network, and Serial ATA, to name a few features. In the marketplace, it's known as i915 and i925 (as far as I'm aware ri
Re:battery friendly? (Score:2)
On a long flight, there is a lot to be said for simply unplugging the AP and putting it away. Then it uses zero power guranteed.
Re:battery friendly? (Score:2)
Remember what happened when someone decided to let the CPU handle processing for modems? THAT was a good idea, wasn't it?
Craig Barrett listen to your advice (Score:5, Insightful)
It's simple economics (Score:4, Insightful)
Great for security (Score:5, Insightful)
With all the talk about them including DRM in their processors it would have been interesting, and scary as well, to see how it would affect their wi-fi chips (had they continued production)..
Might as well make their job easier (and a deeper stab at privacy) by having it notify them in seconds of any sort of "violations".. *cough cough*
Intel vs. WEP (Score:2, Interesting)
Have they fixed Centrino yet? (Score:5, Informative)
Other than economics I wonder why Intel just doesn't produce a kick-ass mini-PCI card that supports the various wireless standards and then flog the Hell out of it to the PC makers. The mini-PCI approach, combined with well designed internal antennas works very well for the Macintosh.
Re:Have they fixed Centrino yet? (Score:2)
I suspect either you had a cheap wireless hub, or someone left the microwave door open.
Re:Have they fixed Centrino yet? (Score:2)
I suspect either you had a cheap wireless hub, or someone left the microwave door open. Actually I had the Linksys hub that I purchased at CompUSA. Strangely enough this hub works just fine with four different PCMCIA wireless cards and with the Linksys 802.11 bridge I have connected to my SliMP3 and to the wireless card built into my Squeezebox.
Of course if everyone on /. ha
Re:Have they fixed Centrino yet? (Score:2)
Re:Have they fixed Centrino yet? (Score:2)
I'm not sure from your post how many different models you tried. Some (many?) of them put diversity antennas in the screen, so they should have good reception and transmission.
Misleading title (Score:2)
Isnt that backwards thinking? (Score:2)
Or did i miss something obvious here?
I see other motives (Score:2)
According to some old Slashdot stories, wireless computing seems to be proliferating but isn't profitable [slashdot.org] and Intel had been looking into makeing chips that use cellular networks [slashdot.org] for wireless connectivity, which would have to come with a fee. Crippling the Wifi networking at the consumer level and steering them towards using cellular networks would be more agreeable to and supported by established industries.
However, like the story says "The company may still develop a custom chipset to re-enable the WiFi
Re:Ugly (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Ugly (Score:2)
Re:The smelly skunk... (Score:3, Informative)
Look back five or eight years. Who would have asked for any network card to be built into the chipset of a computer? (I remember listening to people whine that the IDE controllers were being integrated into the chipsets.) And yet NVidia's integrated NIC is a top-notch performer, and it's tough to find a motherboard without integrated network these days. And as more people move from ethernet to wireless networking, moving from embedded
Re:Obligatory Simpsons reference... (Score:2)
*Sigh*