http://www.vr-zone.com/?i=221
""In the first quarter of next year, AMD will release the first Athlon64 chip for notebooks as well as Newcastle a smaller, less-expensive version of the current Athlon64 for desktops. In the second half of the year, AMD will introduce Odessa--a high-end notebook chip made on the 90-nanometer process--and Dublin, which was designed for inexpensive notebooks and made on the older 130-nanometer process. Oakville and Trinidad will then come to the notebook market in 2005. In desktops, the second half of 2004 will see the introduction of San Diego, a 90-nanometer chip for game PCs; Winchester, a 90-nanometer chip for midrange boxes; and Paris, a 130-nanometer chip for budget buyers. Toledo, a high-end chip, and Palermo, an inexpensive one, will then follow in 2005. Chips made on the K-9 design will appear around the same time. AMD also will experiment with producing processors for "a new class of PC-type devices" that will cost even less than today's desktops. These devices likely will contain AMD Alchemy chips, which are based on a different architecture. AMD will disclose the location of a 65-nanometer fab in the next few weeks. The 65-nanometer facility, which will process larger 300-millimeter wafers, needs to be ready in about two years, relatively rapidly. One of the more likely places appears to be Singapore.""
""In the first quarter of next year, AMD will release the first Athlon64 chip for notebooks as well as Newcastle a smaller, less-expensive version of the current Athlon64 for desktops. In the second half of the year, AMD will introduce Odessa--a high-end notebook chip made on the 90-nanometer process--and Dublin, which was designed for inexpensive notebooks and made on the older 130-nanometer process. Oakville and Trinidad will then come to the notebook market in 2005. In desktops, the second half of 2004 will see the introduction of San Diego, a 90-nanometer chip for game PCs; Winchester, a 90-nanometer chip for midrange boxes; and Paris, a 130-nanometer chip for budget buyers. Toledo, a high-end chip, and Palermo, an inexpensive one, will then follow in 2005. Chips made on the K-9 design will appear around the same time. AMD also will experiment with producing processors for "a new class of PC-type devices" that will cost even less than today's desktops. These devices likely will contain AMD Alchemy chips, which are based on a different architecture. AMD will disclose the location of a 65-nanometer fab in the next few weeks. The 65-nanometer facility, which will process larger 300-millimeter wafers, needs to be ready in about two years, relatively rapidly. One of the more likely places appears to be Singapore.""