Intel ha desarrolado un sistema de refrigeración para portátiles que utilizar un flujo de aire “laminar”, no turbulento, para sacar el calor por la parte baja de la carcasa. Al parecer, el sistema es parecido al que su utiliza en los motores de los jets. ¿Por qué está interesada Intel en esta súper refrigeración? Pues es de gran importancia para la compañía, pues parece que sus nuevos procesadores para portátiles son mucho más finos pero también mucho más calientes. Calentitos, calentitos, nos vienen los portátiles.

[Intel on Thursday demonstrated
a new cooling process that could solve the increasing problem of hot
outsides on notebooks. Similar to the process used for cooling the
surface of a jet engine, the semiconductor giant has produced a laminar
jet airflow system that actively pushes the hot air away from the
bottom of the case, rendering it cool enough to sit on a lap without
overheating the notebook owner's legs or having to rely on bulkier
active cooling.
The laminar jet system is an official
design and can be licensed by notebook manufacturers to include in
their own products. Intel doesn't name customers but says the cooling
system is crucial to future notebooks, which may run as hot or hotter
than existing processors but are more likely to be thinner.
Intel has lately been emphasizing low power use for mainstream notebook
processors, with multiple Core 2 Duo processors dropping from 35W to
25W of power without affecting their performance.]
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