Intel Corp will unveil new chips on Monday that it hopes will close a performance gap with rival Advanced Micro Devices Inc in the market for server system chips, the Wall Street Journal reported.
Chips from Intel provide the processing power for the vast majority of x86 servers, which typically run the Linux operating system or Microsoft Corp's Windows.
Intel's move follows a chip launch from AMD, which in April debuted its "dual-core" server chips featuring two electronic brains on a single piece of silicon. Aided by the additions to its Opteron line, AMD's share of the market for x86 server chips rose to 7.4 percent in the second quarter from 5.6 percent in the first period, the Journal reported.
In x86 servers running at least four chips each, AMD grabbed nearly 20 percent of the US market, up from 11.4 percent in the first period, according to the Journal.
Intel said the new products will join the company's Xeon chip line. The latest model, which carries the designation DP, is tailored for servers with sockets to use as many as two chips.
A model for four-chip servers is expected in a few weeks, the Journal said.
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