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SANTA CLARA, Calif., March 2, 2008 – The Intel® Atom™ processor will be the name for a new family of low-power processors designed specifically for mobile Internet devices (MIDs) and a new class of simple and affordable Internet-centric computers arriving later this year. Together, these new market segments represent a significant new opportunity to grow the overall market for Intel silicon, using the Intel Atom processor as the foundation. The company also announced the Intel® Centrino® Atom™ processor technology brand for MID platforms, consisting of multiple chips that enable the best Internet experience in a pocketable device ...
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Atom Block Diagram
More here in Intel's ISSCC White Paper
Atom is an in-order processor capable of issuing 2 instructions per clock cycle and supports two threads. The processor also has 32K I-cache and 24KB D-cache (instruction and data L1 cache) and has independent floating point and integer execution units. In contrast, VIA's Isaiah is a three issue out of order architecture with 64K combined L1 cache. Again, we'll have to see how the architectures play out but without question Intel seems to have a power consumption edge, while VIA notably may have a few architectural advantages.
In 2008 the market is ripe for what Intel calls "nettops" or a new breed of internet-centric devices designed for ultra-portability and connectivity. The personal computing race is definitely heating up and it's seemingly getting more and more "personal" every day.