by Anton Shilov
11/01/2002 | 02:15 PM
Some people with knowledge of the matter confirmed that Intel will reduce the prices on its Pentium 4 and Celeron microprocessors on the 10th of November. Here is the price-list for the tray versions of Intel’s processors bought in quantities starting from one thousand units.
| Intel Pentium 4 Pricing, effective November 10, 2002 | |||||
| Model | New Price | Price Cut (%) | |||
| Pentium 4 3.06GHz | $637 | - | |||
| Pentium 4 2.80GHz | $401 | 21% | |||
| Pentium 4 2.66GHz | $305 | 24% | |||
| Pentium 4 2.60GHz | $305 | 24% | |||
| Pentium 4 2.53GHz | $193 | 20% | |||
| Pentium 4 2.40GHz | $163 | 15% | |||
| Pentium 4 2.20GHz | $163 | 15% | |||
| Intel Celeron Pricing, effective November 10, 2002 | |||||
| Celeron 2.20GHz | $103 | - | |||
| Celeron 2.10GHz | $89 | - | |||
| Celeron 2.0GHz | $83 | 20% | |||
| Celeron 1.80GHz | $69 | 18% | |||
| Celeron 1.70GHz | $54 | 23% | |||
| Celeron 1.40GHz | $54 | N/D | |||
| Celeron 1.30GHz | $54 | N/D | |||
Almost all the figures had been published on our site before, so, there is no need to once again tell you the same stories about Intel’s aggressive behavior on the microprocessors market. I remind you that AMD will slash their official prices on the same day, as a result, the CPUs from the Sunnyvale-based maker have the same or lower prices compared to the chips from Intel with the similar performance.<%BANNER[article]%>
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