Intel said that it expect the primary phones based on its Moorestown platform to be accessible untimely next year, and tablet PCs prior to that.

Moorestown unites an Atom processor and a graphics processor into a solitary package and is meant at tablet PCs and smartphones. The chip boasts lesser power consumption and higher performance than competitors, the chip creator said during a press conference at the Computex IT demonstrate in Taipei.

"I'd say you'd see phones in the primary half of 2011 timeframe and you'd surely see others pending out behind that," said Anand Chandrasekher, senior vice president and general manager of Intel's Ultra Mobility Group, in an meeting. "And tablets will be somewhat in front of phones."

Phones will take longer to emerge since they have to go during an extra exact difficult process than PCs, he said.

Intel released Moorestown in untimely May and at Computex a numeral of electronics creators are presentation sample devices support on the chip package.

During an exhibition, Intel illustrates the "World of Warcraft" computer game running on a Moorestown-based smartphone. It also verified a 1080p high-definition video clip of the film "Avatar" playing easily on a alike smartphone.

Intel said the chip carries two to four times the graphics performance of rival smartphone processors and is the only smartphone chip that can handle 1080p video.

Most phones don't have the monitor declaration to carry full high-definition but it's likely to be accessible by lots of tablet PCs.