The best way for Intel to battle shrinking profits is to keep shrinking its chips, reaching 32-nanometer geometry by 2009, company executives said Thursday.In the wake of his disclosure that 2006 profits will likely fall 23 percent to US$9.3 billion, Intel Chief Executive Officer Paul Otellini soothed financial analysts with a short-term plan to cut costs by restructuring the company over the next 90 days. But in the long term, the road to higher profits lies with smaller chip geometries, he said, during remarks at the company’s Spring Analyst Meeting in New York.Intel, of Santa Clara, Calif., is already driving in this direction; by the third quarter of 2006, the company will be making more chips with 65-nanometer geometry than with 90 nanometers.That change allows Intel to upgrade its current Netburst microarchitecture family of chips, known as Presler, Yonah and Dempsey. Those processors are sold as Pentium D for desktops, Pentium M for mobile PCs and Xeon for servers. Intel plans to launch its new, Core microarchitecture line beginning with the Woodcrest chip for servers in June, its Conroe chip for desktops in July and its Merom chip for mobile PCs in August.Sometime in 2007, Intel will build a 45-nanometer version of the Core chip family called Penryn. By 2008, Intel will upgrade its microarchitecture in a chip called Nehalem. The company will move to 32-nanometer design by 2009, shrinking that chip line into a design called Nehalem-C. And by 2010, Intel will upgrade its microarchitecture again for a future line of chips called Gesher.If current trends continue, Nehalem and Gesher will be extremely fast and efficient processors.Intel claims that its new 65-nanometer, dual-core chips are three times more power efficient than their 90-nanometer, single-core predecessors.They are also more powerful. The new Conroe chip for desktops will be 40 percent faster than the Pentium D960, the new Merom chip for mobile PCs will be 20 percent faster than the Core Duo T2600, and the new Woodcrest chip for servers will be 80 percent faster than the Xeon 2.8 GHz.There are two ways Intel can make maximum profit in selling these new chips, Otellini said.In markets, the company will target ultramobile PCs in the United States and emerging economies in China, India and Latin America. Each sector could generate sales of 100 million units per year, he said. Intel also makes a lot of money on its chips by bundling them into platforms, such as Centrino for mobile wireless, Viiv for home entertainment and the new vPro for business desktops. Those three brands alone will account for more than 25 percent of Intel’s revenue in 2006, Otellini said.— Ben Ames, IDG News ServiceFor related news coverage, read Qualcomm Sampling 65-Nanometer 3G Chips from TSMC and Intel Announces New ‘vPro’ Brand.Check out our CIO News Alerts and Tech Informer pages for more updated news coverage. Related content brandpost The steep cost of a poor data management strategy Without a data management strategy, organizations stall digital progress, often putting their business trajectory at risk. Here’s how to move forward. By Jay Limbasiya, Global AI, Analytics, & Data Management Business Development, Unstructured Data Solutions, Dell Technologies Jun 09, 2023 6 mins Data Management feature How Capital One delivers data governance at scale With hundreds of petabytes of data in operation, the bank has adopted a hybrid model and a ‘sloped governance’ framework to ensure its lines of business get the data they need in real-time. By Thor Olavsrud Jun 09, 2023 6 mins Data Governance Data Management feature Assessing the business risk of AI bias The lengths to which AI can be biased are still being understood. The potential damage is, therefore, a big priority as companies increasingly use various AI tools for decision-making. By Karin Lindstrom Jun 09, 2023 4 mins CIO Artificial Intelligence IT Leadership brandpost Rebalancing through Recalibration: CIOs Operationalizing Pandemic-era Innovation By Kamal Nath, CEO, Sify Technologies Jun 08, 2023 6 mins CIO Digital Transformation Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe