Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Tablets
  3. Computing
  4. Mobile
  5. Legacy Archives

Could Intel’s next-gen ‘Bay Trail’ Atom processor save new Windows 8 tablets?

Add as a preferred source on Google
hp elitepad 900 front
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Among the many things that users and reviewers complain about with Windows RT and Windows 8 tablets is processing speed. With IDC laying part of the blame for last quarter’s abismal PC sales on Windows 8, many outlets are using this data as subtext for the news coming out of Intel’s annual developer’s conference in Beijing this week.Intel Atom Inside

When Intel China’s Tan Weng Kuan, vice president and general manager of the Mobile Communications Group, took the stage at IDF 2013 to discuss the upcoming quad-core Atom processors for the next-generation of Windows 8 tablets, we couldn’t help but question whether the new chip will solve all of Microsoft’s problems, no matter how much it has improved on the technical front.

Recommended Videos

Codenamed “Bay Trail,” this next-gen Atom chip was first announced at CES and is geared for tablets. The processor is designed to be more power-efficient than the current crop of dual-core “Clover Trail” processors that already power many of the Windows 8 devices on the market, like the HP ElitePad 900 we recently reviewed (pictured above).

What makes the Atom chip a better alternative to the ARM chip found in RT devices is that the Atom processor is based on the same x86 architecture as the Core chip, so you can run full Windows 8 with all your usual software but without the higher price tag or power consumption of Intel devices.

Speed-wise, the Atom processor sits somewhere between the Core and the ARM chips. As DT’s Matt Smith wrote in Should you accept Atom in your next PC?, “Though slow compared to an Intel Core processor, [Atom’s] quicker (sometimes much quicker) than any ARM processor on the market today.”

The new quad-core processor uses a “microarchitecture [that] will [enable] the most powerful Atom processor to date, doubling the computing performance of Intel’s current-generation tablet offering,” said Tan at IDF 2013. With Bay Trail, its performance should be closer to the Core chip as they share a similar design and can make use of Intel HD 4000 graphics.

According to CNET‘s report, Bay Trail’s miniature size means it can fit inside tablets “as thin as 8mm (0.3-inches) that have all-day battery life and weeks of standby.” So we can look forward to slimmer Windows 8 slates that are due to arrive later this year.

While we certainly welcome thinner, more powerful yet more energy-efficient Windows 8 tablets, we can’t shake the feeling that it’s the Windows 8 operating system itself rather than the hardware that needs the most work to win back love from users. A device can have the best processor in the world, but it needs equally awesome software that users will enjoy using to make a device truly great. 

Gloria Sin
Former Contributor
Gloria’s tech journey really began when she was studying user centered design in university, and developed a love for…
Boox’s palm-friendly e-reader will please bookworms with its stylus and cutesy looks
Boox has added stylus support to the Go 6 e-reader for note taking
Boox Go 6 (Gen II) e-reader with stylus

Boox has launched the Go 6 (Gen II), its new 6-inch E Ink reader and the successor to the 2024 Boox Go 6. The new model keeps the small, lightweight format that made the original popular, but adds one major upgrade in the form of note-taking support.

The Go 6 (Gen II) is now available for pre-order through the official Boox shop for $199.99, with shipping expected to begin around June 17. It is still very much a compact travel e-reader, but the stylus support gives it a bit more flexibility than the 2024 model.

Read more
AT&T per-day plans put cellular services on your iPad, even if you’re not a customer
AT&T is selling cellular data like a one-day gym pass now
iPad

AT&T has introduced a new wireless offering called Unlimited Day Pass, giving eligible iPad users access to 24 hours of unlimited cellular data for a flat daily fee of $3 - even if they are not AT&T customers. The new service is designed for Wi-Fi + Cellular iPad models with eSIM support and marks one of the first major attempts by a U.S. carrier to offer truly on-demand tablet connectivity without contracts, subscriptions, or long-term commitments.

According to AT&T, the first Unlimited Day Pass is free for customers, limited to one iPad per person. After that, users can purchase additional passes directly from their iPad using a debit or credit card. The company says activation can be completed directly through the iPad’s settings menu without requiring an app or even an active Wi-Fi connection. Users simply need to open the Settings app, navigate to Cellular Data, and add the AT&T Unlimited Day Pass. Once activated, the 24-hour unlimited data session begins shortly afterward.

Read more
You can now buy the most affordable Kindle Scribe on Amazon
The Kindle Scribe without Front Light is now available for $70 less than the standard model
kindle-scribe-without-front-light

If you have been holding off on getting a Kindle Scribe because of the price, Amazon just gave you a reason to reconsider. The Kindle Scribe without Front Light is now available for purchase on Amazon for $429.99, making it $70 cheaper than the standard Kindle Scribe.

Amazon first announced this model back in 2025, and it has finally arrived. However, the one catch is right there in the name. There is no front light, which means reading or writing in dim environments will be trickier than on the pricier model.

Read more