How does Intel feel in general about the current Alderwood/Grantsdale product, including the Extreme Editions?
We’re happy with Extreme Edition. It fills a niche up there in the high-end which is what some people want. To use the analogy of the Lambourgini, a Honda Civic will get you from point A to point B, but the Lambourgini will do so faster and it’s something we wanted to offer to our users. The Grantsdale and Alderwood have been doing quite well for us. On our Investor Relations site, it’s reported that we’re expecting the majority of our chipset shipments to be of those models. In terms of our desktop chipsets, it’s doing very well. 2) Was there anything Intel felt was missing technology-wise or did the product launch as planned? If you look at the launch as a whole, we thought it went real well. We were introducing several major technology changes such as DDR2 and PCI Express. Looking back, we would have liked to have seen items such as DDR2 and PCI Express ramp up a little faster, but that is starting to happen now. 3) Where do you see PCI Express right now? Do you think Intel is still