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Intel’s Light Peak could launch early next year – on Macs?

by Pete Mason on 4 November 2010, 10:22

Tags: Intel (NASDAQ:INTC), Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL)

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Since Intel has been dragging its heels on USB 3.0, some have suggested that the chip-giant is trying to make room for its own alternative - Light Peak. The next-gen technology has remained elusive, though, and no launch date has ever been pinned-down.

However, according to CNET, the interface could be making its debut in the first half of 2011. Citing an industry source close to the technology, the report suggests that Light Peak is 'on track' to appear in retail products during the first six-months of next year. In fact, the insider even suggests that a launch in the earlier part of the year is 'likely'.

There was also some suggestion - though it seemed to be mostly conjecture - that the first systems to support the new interface could come from Apple. Some of the earliest demonstrations of Light Peak were carried out using a machine running OSX and there have even been claims that the Cupertino-based company invented the technology before handing it off to Intel. This could also be seen to fit with recent comments from Steve Jobs suggesting that USB 3.0 wouldn't appear on Macs until - or perhaps unless - it was natively supported by Intel.

With widespread adoption of USB 3.0 still a way off, Intel could easily swoop in with Light Peak to take over the market. The interface will initially provide throughput of up to 10Gpbs in both directions - scalable to over 100Gbps in the future - and can support multiple different protocols at once. While it's thought that the technology will initially be used as an internal interconnect, Intel has also demonstrated it as a direct, high-bandwidth connection to peripherals and displays.



HEXUS Forums :: 6 Comments

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If 10gbps (or even 100gbps) was the actual speed, these things could end up doubling-up as network interfaces, as well. One less port on the back of your MoBo.
Nevermind.

Good news by any event.
This does have implications for other interfaces too. Either Lightpeak will be adopted for networking (which they have said would be possible) or it's really going to push the price of regular 10G ethernet adapters way, way down.

Both of which will be good things :)
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If 10gbps (or even 100gbps) was the actual speed, these things could end up doubling-up as network interfaces, as well. One less port on the back of your MoBo.
People used to use firewire as a simple high speed interface before gigabit was afforable.
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People used to use firewire as a simple high speed interface before gigabit was afforable.
I wasn't aware of that. Thanks. For the time, FireWire would probably have saturated the speed of a single IDE HDD. It could therefore have been very useful.

I've seen USB interconnects, but only for moving files from one PC to another as a one-off. The ones I remember seeing invariably came with software to assist you with the “transfer”.