It is a newspaper's duty to print the news and raise hell - William Storey, Chicago Times
INTEL HAS ADDED FOUR NEW MEMBERS to the Atom Z500 series in an attempt to push the processors into devices other than netbooks.
Aiming at embedded in-car systems as well interactive kiosks and other industrial applications, the ultra-low power chips which run at between 1.1 GHz and 1.6 GHz, draw tiny amounts of power and are about the size of a thumbnail.
Built on a Intel's existing 45nm process, the chips are designed to rub shoulders with those designed by Brit chip shop ARM which currently dominates the low-power processor market.

The company has also released its Media Phone Reference Design – including schematics and validated software stacks – to developers.
The chips will be shipping in commercial quantities in the second quarter of 2009 but pricing has not yet been announced. µ
LOL 2.2W? What a laugh. Intel is guaranteeing no one uses Atom for a smart phone with power consumption like that. Seems they just don't get the concept that folks want their ultra portable devices to last longer than a few hours. When competitive products run on 1/10th the power, what is it they think they're offering? Their brand? ha ha aha.
This is just the CPU (2.2W) - the peripherals will consume extra power on top!!!