Anand posted a preview from CES of all of Intel's Menlow-related stuff:
http://www.anandtech.com/cpuchipsets/intel/showdoc.aspx?i=3199Menlow is of course the Centrino-like x86-based "platform" that Intel is positioning to eventually compete with the ARM processors used in all the Palms, SmartPhones, Set-top-Boxes, and (of course) the iPhone. It is the CPU and Chipset being used to power all of these MIDs they're all squawking about.
To me, and many people in the "biz", these seem to be just v3 of the UMPC thing that Intel and Microsoft pushed a while back. At least Intel woke up this time and realized that Vista is far too heavy to run well on any of these portable devices, which is why most of the MIDs run Linux. However, most early looks I've seen are less than enthusiastic.
I think Menlow has some real potential though... Especially in the 2-3 year horizon. Moorestown (the next-generation Menlow platform) should be quite competitive with ARM power-wise and should have significantly better performance. Also, the fact that it is x86 means
huge software-side efficiencies will come heavily into play. Until then, when someone can put it into something as slick and usable as the iPhone (I wouldn't bet against Apple), I'd say the MIDs will be confined to a niche market.
Now... If Apple decides to throw us a Menlow-based Tablet PC, with an iPhone-like UI on-top at Macworld, then we'll really be talking!