Intel, Oracle Reportedly in Talks to Help Major PC Vendors Build Low-Cost Network Computers

Chipmaker Hedging Bets on Its Joint NetPC Initiative With Microsoft, According to InformationWeek

PRNewswire
MANHASSET, N.Y.
Mar 17, 1997

Intel CEO Andrew Grove met behind closed doors two weeks ago with Oracle's Larry Ellison to discuss a plan under which Intel would greatly increase its support of the Network Computer (NC) platform, according to an exclusive report in CMP's InformationWeek magazine. The talks could pave the way for vendors such as Compaq Computer, Dell Computer, and Hewlett-Packard -- which have publicly dismissed the NC -- to enter the growing market for low-cost computers by using Intel's technology.

Sources familiar with the Intel-Oracle talks told InformationWeek that Ellison and Jerry Baker, President of Network Computer Inc. (NCI), an Oracle subsidiary, met with Grove to discuss the development of motherboards optimized for NCs, as well as pricing issues. NCs built under the Oracle specification already use the 133-MHz Pentium chip, but at their meeting, Grove suggested that NCI's partners start using faster Pentium chips. According to one source, PC vendors have also met privately with NCI in recent weeks to evaluate the viability of building NCs. Intel and Oracle declined to comment.

The secret talks indicate that the chipmaker may be hedging its bets on the NetPC, a joint Intel-Microsoft initiative. Intel and the Redmond, Wash. software giant just last week unveiled the specifications for their pared down computer platform, which will ship this summer to directly compete with Oracle's NCs and other low-cost computing options.

Oracle's NCs and Intel/Microsoft's NetPCs represent two developments brought on by an insatiable need for greater control over desktop management and computing costs in the enterprise. Details on both initiatives and the Intel-Oracle discussions can also be found on InformationWeek Online at http://www.informationweek.com/.

In addition to the weekly magazine, InformationWeek provides a complete system of information products for people who manage technology in business, such as InformationWeek Online (http://www.informationweek.com/), the Web-based resource for the information systems community; the annual InformationWeek 500 Conference for business and technology executives; and InformationWeek Daily, delivering news directly to the enterprise buyer's desktop.

Published by CMP Media Inc., InformationWeek magazine delivers news, strategies, trends and product and technology information to people who manage technology in business. At 350,000 qualified IT buyers, InformationWeek has the largest circulation in the information systems category, according to Simmons CompPro, IV.

CMP Media Inc. provides publishing, marketing and information services to the entire high-technology spectrum -- the builders, sellers and users of technology -- through print and electronic media. All of CMP's publications and online products can be accessed through the company's TechWeb® site on the World Wide Web (http://www.techweb.com/). Print titles include EE Times, Computer Reseller News and WINDOWS Magazine.

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SOURCE: CMP Media Inc.

CONTACT: Steve Rubel of CMP Corporate Communications, 516-562-7434, or
srubel(at)cmp.com