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HP's First AMD Turion-Based Notebook Helps Cancer Charity

Part of proceeds from each sale to benefit the Lance Armstrong cancer foundation.

Tom Krazit, IDG News Service

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Hewlett-Packard will launch its first notebook based on Advanced Micro Devices' Turion mobile processor as part of a benefit for cyclist Lance Armstrong's foundation.

The HP Special Edition L2000 notebook PC comes with one of several AMD Turion processors and a starting price of $999. HP and AMD will donate $50 from the sale of each notebook to the Lance Armstrong Foundation, a charitable organization founded by the six-time Tour de France champion that raises money for cancer research and educational programs.

Turion is AMD's first real attempt to compete directly with Intel's Pentium M notebook processor. AMD's Athlon 64 and Athlon XP processors have been used in heavy performance notebooks for years, but the company is now trying to get its chips into thinner and lighter notebooks, a category dominated by the Pentium M.

Specs

The L2000 comes with a 14-inch wide-screen display and weighs 5.3 pounds. It will be available for U.S. customers starting in June at HP's Web site, and will hit U.S. retail shelves in July. There are no plans as of Friday to make the notebook available outside the United States, according to an HP spokesperson.

U.S. notebook buyers are just now starting to realize the benefits of thin-and-light notebooks, a category that has had more success to date in Europe and Asia. The percentage of notebooks sold in U.S. retail stores that weigh less than 6 pounds reached 30 percent of all notebook sales in April, up from just 10 percent last April, according to data from Current Analysis Inc.

The notebook should help HP erase a poor performance last year among retail buyers during the back-to-school shopping season in July and August, an important period for PC companies that is second only to the fourth-quarter holidays, said Sam Bhavnani, an analyst with Current Analysis in San Diego.

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