re: They announced they were going to use a TI ARM processor, but if they ever released those models, I must have missed it...
Nope ... Intel XScale:
Intel's XScale Finds a Place With Palm
Tungsten C will be the first Palm device to use Intel's handheld processor.
Tom Krazit, IDG News Service Wednesday, April 09, 2003
Palm's new Tungsten C handheld will be released around the end of April as the first PDA bearing the Palm brand to use one of Intel's XScale processors, a source familiar with the company's plans said Tuesday.
The Tungsten C showed up in the ordering system at office supply company Staples in February for $500, but Staples employees could not confirm any details at the time.
The Tungsten C will feature 802.11b wireless Internet technology, in contrast to its sister Tungsten W handheld, which uses a GSM/GPRS (Global System for Mobile Communications/General Packet Radio Service) module for wireless data communications.
Chip Competition The Tungsten C marks a design victory for Intel over Texas Instruments and Motorola. Motorola's Dragonball chip powers the Tungsten W, and the Tungsten T uses TI's OMAP chip.
Intel's XScale processors for handhelds have mostly appeared in personal digital assistants that use Microsoft's Pocket PC 2002 operating system; but a few Palm OS devices, such as Sony's Clié, exist as well.
A Palm representative could not be reached for comment. Intel declined to comment.{/i]
sorry, don't have the link (EP posted on Intel board)
and ...
XScale allowing Intel to StrongARM into Palm handhelds
By Ian Fried Staff Writer, CNET News.com August 24, 2000, 6:25 PM PT
update Intel's revamped StrongARM architecture, introduced today as XScale, should offer a significant boost to future generations of Palm devices and other handheld computers, analysts say. Sources say Palm plans to use the low-power Intel architecture in a forthcoming version of its handheld. Palm chief executive Carl Yankowski said in April that Palm planned to use chips based on designs from England's ARM Inc., though he did not explicitly mention Intel's offering. Gartner analyst Thomas Starnes says it's hard to predict whether Palm will design new versions of its handheld devices using Intel's new XScale chip architecture. But XScale, he says, would be a good choice for a personal digital assistant. see commentary
Analysts agree that Intel's flavor of the ARM design is the only chip powerful enough to offer Palm a meaningful improvement on the Motorola Dragonball chips it uses today.
Intel representatives would not confirm the design win, and Palm representatives would not elaborate on Yankowski's earlier comments.
Both XScale and its StrongARM predecessors make use of the ARM instruction set, but Intel has redesigned the processor to offer far more power than standard ARM designs.
"You need something with this kind of horsepower," said Linley Gwennap, principal at consulting firm The Linley Group.
The XScale architecture offers performance roughly 20 times the Dragonball and uses less power, said MicroDesign resources analyst Peter Glaskowsky. The chip architecture also is able to shift performance on the fly, throttling up for multimedia programs and conserving power when running a calendar or memo pad.
The result is a handheld capable of running video but still able to run on off-the-shelf batteries, analysts said.
While Hitachi and IBM also offer good low-power chips, Glaskowsky said the ability of the XScale to handle such a range of voltages is impressive.
Glaskowsky pointed out there is a fair amount of other hardware and software needed to create devices that take advantage of the XScale's abilities.
While an Intel spokesman would not confirm the Palm design win, executives said the XScale is being designed into a number of next-generation handhelds.
Intel is also targeting so-called third-generation wireless handsets that will process video and data streams along with voice phone calls. If Intel is successful, within a few years the company could be selling more XScale-based chips than it does PC chips using the x86 architecture, Gwennap said.
Today, Intel sells about 100 million PC processors, Gwennap said.
Intel got the StrongARM technology when it purchased Digital Equipment's semiconductor unit in 1997. Many of the original chip designers fled after the acquisition, leaving Intel to rebuild the program.