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Forum nameHigh-Tech
Topic subjectstep you reading game up and read the whole article...
Topic URLhttp://board.okayplayer.com/okp.php?az=show_topic&forum=11&topic_id=134147&mesg_id=135500
135500, step you reading game up and read the whole article...
Posted by Uchiwa_Sasuke, Thu Jan-24-08 12:49 PM
The reviewer (Anand) suspected the processor was already in the pipeline, but goes on to note that this was not the case because the footprint of the Mac Book Air processor together with the packaging and voltage disagree with his suspected view, thus confirming apple did specifically create this for the Mac Book Air and contradicting his earlier published article on the mystry of the processor in the mac book air.

http://www.macrumors.com/2008/01/17/intels-custom-processor-for-macbook-air/


It came out of Job's own mouth FFS !!! DO a google search if you have to !!!

The CPU and chipset are both reduced in footprint, we assumed that this might be the case but lacked the visual evidence from Apple to back it up (at least until we can get a MacBook Air in house and take it apart). If you look back at our Montevina SFF diagram from IDF you'll see that the overall platform footprint reduction of 58% comes through reducing both CPU and chipset size, so it makes sense that Intel applied the same technology to the 965 and Merom chips in this case.

The line about lower voltages threw us, we originally assumed that the Core 2 Duos used in the MacBook Air were the L7700 and L7500, both Low Voltage 65nm Meroms running at somewhere between 0.9V and 1.2000V. A little more digging revealed that the chips used in the MacBook Air weren't LV parts after all, but they were lower voltage than the standard mobile Core 2 processors.

The 1.6GHz chip in the MacBook Air runs at 1.0V - 1.25V, while the 1.8GHz part runs at 1.1125V - 1.25V. Note that this is less voltage than a standard mobile Core 2 Duo, but more voltage than the Low Voltage chips. The TDP of these not-quite-low-voltage Core 2s reflects the increased voltage; while the L7700 and L7500 have a 17W TDP, the chips used in the MacBook Air are rated at 20W (standard mobile Core 2 Duo chips are 35W parts).