How will Windows 8 Work with Intel?

magicc8ball

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This is a little interesting. What do you all think?

intel-clover-trail-tablet-ces-2012_610x451.jpg


A Windows 8 tablet using an Intel next-generation dual-core 'Clover Trail' Atom chip was shown at CES.

(Credit: Brooke Crothers)

Intel will have to slog through a tough 2012 before it sees any real windfall from Windows 8, according to investment bank Piper Jaffray.

"We believe CY12 (calendar year 2012) is shaping up to be a difficult year for Intel.... We expect 2H12 (second half 2012) to be weak ahead of the launch of Windows 8, the most significant upgrade to the operating system since Windows 3.0," Piper Jaffray analyst Gus Richard wrote in a research note today.

Intel traditionally benefits from Microsoft operating system upgrade cycles as companies and consumers buy new Intel-based PCs along with the new OS. But the promise of a new OS can also cause consumers to postpone purchases until PCs with the new software--in this case, Windows 8--arrive.

A 2012 Windows 8 rollout may be problematic, according to the investment bank. "Moreover, our contacts suggest that Windows 8 beta has already slipped and we believe it will be a challenging product transition. In addition, this is likely to be the biggest rewrite to the Windows OS since Windows 3.0 when Microsoft moved from DOS to a graphical user interface," he wrote.

"At a minimum, we believe Windows 8 will create a significant demand pause for multiple quarters, significantly impacting PC growth in CY12," Richard said.

Microsoft has been very careful not to say anything about a release date for Windows 8, which will offer a fully developed touch interface, a first for a Microsoft PC operating system. But industry sources that CNET spoke to at CES often cited the second half of this year as a likely timeframe for a release.

Richard continues. "The launch date could easily slip into the Christmas timeframe or into CY13. Moreover, application software vendors are indicating that they are having to make more significant changes to their code than expected. This calls into question how well legacy applications will run on Windows."

Intel, not surprisingly, is more upbeat than Piper Jaffray. The chipmaker was showing off tablets running Windows 8 (albeit, encased in glass) at CES, and CEO Paul Otellini has made comments in the past several months about what a boon Windows 8 will be for his company.

Namely, that Windows 8 will allow PC makers using its chips to come out with newfangled ultrabooks that straddle the laptop and tablet markets and offer a level of backward compatibility that won't be possible on competing Windows 8 devices running on ARM chips from the likes of Qualcomm, Texas Instruments, and Nvidia.
 
Yea I read about the microsoft/intel fears a few weeks ago, they are both slipping in the mobile markets with Apple OS and Android using ARM chips absolutely dominating the market. No doubt micotel will still dominate the traditional home pc range but as the laptop/tablet/smart phone range blurs I can understand why they are so concerned. That and of course increasingly business servers have been turning to linux based systems.

I'm not sure how the traditional pc market will react to the new interface either - a lot of people won't appreciate or be able to handle a new gui i fear.
 
Yea I read about the microsoft/intel fears a few weeks ago, they are both slipping in the mobile markets with Apple OS and Android using ARM chips absolutely dominating the market. No doubt micotel will still dominate the traditional home pc range but as the laptop/tablet/smart phone range blurs I can understand why they are so concerned. That and of course increasingly business servers have been turning to linux based systems.

I'm not sure how the traditional pc market will react to the new interface either - a lot of people won't appreciate or be able to handle a new gui i fear.

Ya as of right now I am planning on building a whole new pc based of the new chipset and Ivy bridge. I was going to go all out but I am now sitting here and thinking that maybe I just do a budget system build, and see what comes out next year with Laptops and smaller devices...

As for Windows 8 I like it but I do not know if I am going to like the app based system replace what we have with windows 7... I do like the fact that windows is going for kernals now =)
 
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