While many might think that "Ultrabook" is a generic term for a new
performance ultra-portable notebook form-factor, it is a registered
trademark of Intel, which governs the specifications of what qualifies
to be an Ultrabook. Intel will launch a well-defined Ultrabook platform
based on its third-generation Core processor family, codenamed "Ivy
Bridge", later this year. Meanwhile, AMD is finalizing a performance
ultra-portable specification of its own, powered by its next-generation
"Trinity" accelerated processing units (APUs), which it will call
"Ultrathin".
Ultrathin will be designed to offer competitive CPU performance to
Ultrabook, and superior GPU performance to it, at target prices 10-20
percent lower than Ultrabook. In 2012, while Intel bagged about 75
design wins for its Ultrabook platform, AMD claims to have already won
20. AMD's Ultrathin platform will have advantages over Intel's Ultrathin
with regards to platform and component costs. The average AMD Ultrathin
with $100~$200 cheaper than the average Intel Ultrabook. Some notebook
vendors are concerned that a competitive platform to Intel Ultrabook
could result in a price-war between the two platforms, and end up
reducing the prices of the now profitable-looking performance
ultraportable segment.
Source: DigiTimes
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