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Byline: James DeTar
Investor's Business Daily
By midyear, Intel Corp. will finally ship Merced, the first in a long-awaited line of microprocessors called Itanium. The event may prove confusing for some Intel customers.
Merced won't be as fast as the company's flagship Pentium 4 processor, used in personal computers. But Merced will in some ways be Intel's most powerful microprocessor.
Itanium chips can be clustered. That means computer makers can group up to 512
Merced processors together to act as a single computer. Pentium chips can't dothat.
That should open up new markets for Intel, as Itanium machines take on the mostpowerful computers.