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From: "Cameron Mallory" <>
Date: Mon, 6 Apr 1998 16:48:04 -0700

http://dailynews.yahoo.com/headlines/technology/story.html?s=z/reuters/98040
6/tech/stories/nsi_1.html

or better yet..

I apologize if the formatting of this is all wacky...  I am forced to use
Outlook express...

Regards,

Cameron Mallory

Monday April 6 10:30 AM EDT
National Semiconductor Intros "PC on a Chip"
By Therese Poletti

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - National Semiconductor today plans to announce a
way to combine most of the chips used in personal computers into a single
chip, which could bring PC prices under $500 and lead to a host of new
computing devices.

National, the country's fourth-largest chip maker, said its new chip will
replace a dozen or more separate chips typically found in PCs and combine
technologies that it has developed and purchased in recent years.

"Everything we have been doing is putting all the pieces together,"
National's Chief Executive Brian Halla said in an interview.

National, based in Santa Clara, Calif., completed a $500 million merger with
Cyrix, a maker of Intel. compatible clone chips, in November, giving it an
arsenal of products to create a PC with one chip, excluding system memory.

Other key moves included its purchase of Mediamatics in March 1997 for its
graphics and television encoding technology and Pico Power in August 1996
for system logic.

National said its new chip will lead to even lower cost PCs and other
low-cost "information appliances." Halla predicted PC prices could fall to
$400 to $500 with National's new chips.

"The pricing is up to the PC suppliers, but what we are trying to do is ...
put more functionality on the chip by putting more and more intelligence on
the chip," he said.

Halla will discuss plans for the new chip at a semiconductor industry
conference in Phoenix, Ariz., Monday. He said National will have the first
working version of its chip by year-end and it could be in volume production
by June 1999.

Analysts said the new chips were significant and could lead to development
of other computing gadgets.

"I view it as a progress report. It's not just back of the envelope stuff
anymore," said Nathan Brookwood, an analyst at Dataquest Inc., a market
research firm in San Jose, Calif. "It requires a lot of chip work but also a
lot of software work."

"This sub-$500 PC can take the forms of some very consumer friendly
devices," said Richard Doherty, director of Envisioneering, a research firm
in Seaford, N.Y. "It's the whole PC, not a PC in four packages. That was a
very smart decision (for National) to have made a few years ago."

National's Cyrix already makes processors that power PCs that sell for less
than $1,000. When Compaq Computer launched its first sub-$1,000 PC in
February 1997, a Cyrix processor was inside.

Since then, sub-$1,000 PCs have become one of the fastest growing segments
of the PC market, using lower-cost Intel clone chips from its rivals
National and Advanced Micro Devices.

Intel, under pressure because of its lack of a product for that market, is
expected to introduce its entry, a family called Celeron, in the next week
or so.

"I think we are about a year and a half ahead of them," Halla said of Intel,
whose chips dominate the PC industry. "I think we have a good plan to stay
ahead of them."

"You will be surrounded by PCs," Halla said of machines that could use
National's new chips. "You will get into your car and say e-mail please, you
will have a flat panel display on the wall above your bedroom. It could be
impossible to predict what will happen by the year 2000."

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