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Intel Cloud Entertainment Hardware

Intel Planning Thumb-Sized PCs For Next Year 101

angry tapir (1463043) writes Intel is shrinking PCs to thumb-sized "compute sticks" that will be out next year. The stick will plug into the back of a smart TV or monitor "and bring intelligence to that," said Kirk Skaugen, senior vice president and general manager of the PC Client Group at Intel, during the Intel investor conference in Santa Clara, California. They might be a bit late to the party, but since Skaugen mentioned both Chromecast and Amazon's Fire TV Stick, hopefully that means Intel has some more interesting and general-purpose plans.
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Intel Planning Thumb-Sized PCs For Next Year

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  • by jedidiah ( 1196 ) on Thursday November 20, 2014 @05:23PM (#48429993) Homepage

    Chromecast and the Roku thumb sized machines are very specialized hardware that likely won't have the capabilities or flexibility of an Intel variant. They likely not to be in the same class at all.

    If anything, they might be comparable to some generic Android stick and possibly not even that due to the limitations of Android.

    This might be more like a Chromebox.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      The HARDWARE is more generally powerful and functional on a current ARM SoC - ARM SoCs having focused on accumulating the raft of supporting hardware IP (like sound, image, video processing) for FAR longer than Intel- Intel expected such functionality would lie with plug-in boards or chip-sets.

      Intel has ONE advantage, and one only- and that is when an Intel SoC is running FULL-BLOWN Microsoft Windows. Now, its Android vs Windows, and in terms of software support it isn't even funny- Google's weak-sauce lock

    • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

      by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday November 20, 2014 @06:48PM (#48430493)
      Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • If Intel and Google want high bandwidth and net neutrality they should just build their own national internet with those features. And add crypto hubs at each users end so all data traffic is encrypted. Intel makes the hardware and Google siphons up the data for advertising, win-win.
        • If Intel and Google want high bandwidth and net neutrality they should just build their own national internet with those features. And add crypto hubs at each users end so all data traffic is encrypted.

          You left out the blackjack and hookers...

      • I hope they at least let you mount disk drives using Samba or NFS or whatever from your own file server at home, in addition to whatever walled-garden functionality they may be selling. Much of their target market is going to include people who have those, either purpose-built servers or terabyte-disk USB/Ethernet external drives or their old Windows box with file sharing turned on.

      • by tomhath ( 637240 )
        Yea, they'll fail just as badly as the iPad
      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) *

        Why do you think Google is rolling out its own unlimited use fibre networks? The realized that ISPs are a threat and decided to either force them to offer a decent service simply drive them out of business.

    • by amiga3D ( 567632 )

      I have a Chromecast already. I took it out of the box, hooked it up to my TV and set it up to work with my tablet and computer. I then put it back in the box. What a waste of $35 dollars. It's so locked down as to be useless. If that's Intel's idea of a product then they can keep it.

  • great to make tiny pc's but that doesn't help those of us who want more computing power.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Get a core i5 NUC..
      http://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/nuc/overview.html

      I always liked 'full sized' PC's myself, but the NUC can't be beat for some things, and is more than enough for 90% of all 'normal' computer users.
      Plus..
      When someone is all cranky about having computer issues it is so nice to just walk over to them, pull out this little thing, swap it and just bring their pc back to shop to re-image/repair.

      • If you really need computational horsepower, get yourself some kind of PC with a fast graphics card and run CUDA or one of the other GPU-based computation packages. (In my case, I went with a Raspberry Pi :-)

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • How's the straight-CPU power on the AMD machines? Comparable to I5?

          We've been using NUCs as mini development servers, and so far I've been disappointed with their reliability. Apparently there are widespread problems with the USB3 when connecting to external drives (intermittent, only happens on some of our NUCs). Additionally, they intentionally crippled their driver stack to not support Windows Server.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Current Atoms are equal to high-end core2 duos coupled with a good-enough gpu and h264 accelerator. Not that bad.

    • great to make tiny pc's but that doesn't help those of us who want more computing power.

      Just like powerful desktop CPUs doesn't help those who want tiny PCs, but I didn't see anything in the article to suggest they are abandoning high power chips in favor of small low powered ones.

    • by suutar ( 1860506 )

      mount a few dozen of these on your clothes and have a wearable beowulf :)

    • This is for those that don't need the computing power. This is something in between a normal PC and a ChromeCast. Not as locked down but just as slow.
      Now ChromeCast has a specific market: easy video streaming with your Android device as a remote. Whether this offers enough over that to find a real place in the market remains to be seen.
      It does offer full windows or linux. That means the possibilities are far greater. Whether the processor is sufficient for enough of those possibilities will probably be a de

  • by Stormwatch ( 703920 ) <(rodrigogirao) (at) (hotmail.com)> on Thursday November 20, 2014 @05:25PM (#48430005) Homepage

    So, just like any of the countless ARM-based Android mini-PCs that are already out there right now. Except this is quite more expensive.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      http://hexus.net/tech/news/systems/76025-intel-bay-trail-powered-hdmi-stick-pc-available-online/

      Just like countless arm-based android mini-PCs.

      Except not Arm based, running intel and you can run most of your normal business and entertainment software on it.

      So not like arm at all.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      The trouble with the "countless arm based android mini-pcs" is that they quickly become pretty useless.

      Unsupported mystery builds of android running on undocumented SoCs that can pretty much only run said mystery android build that they shipped with.

      Intel, on the other hand, has a pretty good reputation with documentation and portability. Your intel stick will run windows, any flavor of linux you want, chromeOS, etc.

      Will likely be a lot faster too. Since baytrail Intel's low end cpus have been competitive w

  • by Anonymous Coward

    My, what big thumbs you have!

    • by Anonymous Coward

      So that I can play Assassins creed with you, granddaughter!

      • by Anonymous Coward

        For the love of god tell me you're not a proctologist.

  • by SeaFox ( 739806 ) on Thursday November 20, 2014 @05:28PM (#48430023)

    And here I worry about losing memory sticks because they're so small.
    "Dammit! I left my computer in my pocket and it went through the wash..."

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Intel has been doing this for decades now. They releases a press release saying that they will "as early as next year" have a device available for purchase that (insert chip use that is currently not served by Intel chips).

    And then they actually release the product *years* later. This goes for their server line, their atom devices, and more recently, their Edison chips and now this.

    Honestly, if you have any use for a device this small just buy the damn arm version that already actually exists, or the more r

  • ...you guys stop designing the worlds worst interfaces for things. DO NOT HIRE ENGINEERS TO DESIGN THE UIs. It's important. Really.

    • Can confirm. I'm an engineer who once designed a UI. Turns out it's a lot harder than it looks.
      • by Bengie ( 1121981 )
        I hate UI work, I prefer APIs and commandlines.
        • Seriously, I quite enjoy it, but please give me a UI designer, or at least an artist with UI experience to work with! I've worked on some cool interactive display stuff.
  • The real story is about incompetence in Intel management. Intel has often, in past years, announced something before it is ready. Intel management is announcing something that hasn't happened yet.
    • You are ignorant of how marketing and sales work, aren't you? Step one, generate hype.

  • Basically, a minimal PC that you would plug into all the I/O hardware, so that you could bring it anywhere, plug it into someone else's hardware, always have all your files and programs there.

    But then that became completely unecessary with the advent of cheap phones, tablets, and netbooks.
    • Basically, a minimal PC that you would plug into all the I/O hardware, so that you could bring it anywhere, plug it into someone else's hardware, always have all your files and programs there.

      This is what I want in my phone (in addition, or course, to the phone actually working as a phone)

    • by ihtoit ( 3393327 )

      it's called a 16GB usb flash drive (£8.99 at PC World! The hell happened to the price of flash memory??) with a bootable Debian derivative installed on it, plugged into $random_terminal and booted.

      The ONLY prerequisites for such a system are the flash drive, the terminal being x86/32 compatible, having 512MB RAM or more and able to boot from USB.

      • by SeaFox ( 739806 )

        You missed the whole having to plug it into a working computer part.
        This IS the computer. All you need is a display and a keyboard/mouse.

        Actually, given that you would still need an input device, they should just build this into a keyboard, with a trackpad.
        Then you just plug a long HDMI cable in so you can sit at a comfortable distance from the screen, add power...

      • Well my OS boots off a USB2 120GB SSD but anyway... :)

        The point here is that there is no need for a terminal - all you need is a TV or monitor with USB and HDMI ports.

      • £8.99? Ouch! In the US, you can get a 16GB flash drive for $8.99 - a LOT cheaper.

        • by ihtoit ( 3393327 )

          I did say PC World, they're a brick-n-mortar store. I'm pretty sure I could get it for a quarter that at eBuyer, but I don't tend to shop online.

          • Well - even brick and mortar hits that price point on sale at least once a month somewhere around. I guess I just don't buy that sort of thing when it's not.

  • I already know what I'm gonna do with mine.

  • This is all about internal optics in the big company.

    VPs need to be seen to be coming to the market with "innovative" new products. Note is cloning a chromecast an innovation ?

    This is the right announcement - eight/ten years late. Chromecast is out there and ARM owns this market segment. The time to get into thumb-size TV set-top box additions was 2004

    Also didn't Intel recently sell off it's TV division ? Now it's getting back in, in the USB stick/chromecast side... WTF. Hey - make a decision and stic
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