Silicon Valley loves an underdog. That’s partly because such tales feed the industry’s self-mythologizing and the IPO culture that attracts fresh money and new investors. To be honest, IT can boast ...
There is little doubt that computer chip leader Intel needs to evolve. The recent news about PC sales falling 14%, the most in history, only confirms that it will need to gain a meaningful place in ...
We tend to take for granted that our PCs will turn on and the silicon inside them will dutifully crunch through whatever tasks we ask, be it video encoding, playing games, or even just watching a ...
'Customers look to Intel for a predictable cadence of high-performance products and technologies that are integral to their success. […] Accountability comes with the territory. We will improve our ...
Intel has definite ideas about how it wants small laptops based on its Atom processors to evolve, but a senior company executive readily concedes that the market — in the form of consumers and ...
Amid a revolution of wireless technology that lets today's users enjoy high-speed data connections in airports and in coffee shops, Intel is positioning itself to reap the rewards. Eric Mentzer, the ...
Intel has set its technicians working on a new initiative that it hopes will get mobile devices piggybacking on other devices its user may come across, as well as making use of the increasing number ...
The event of interest in Silicon Valley this morning was the annual Research@Intel Day, in which the various research teams at Intel’s ten R/D centers around the world get to do Show and Tell for the ...
There is little doubt that computer chip leader Intel Corporation (NASDAQ:INTC) needs to evolve. The recent news about PC sales falling 14%, the most in history, only confirms that it will need to ...
Why it matters: Intel is gearing up for what the company considers the "next major step" in the evolution of the original x86 instruction set architecture (ISA). The Santa Clara corporation is ...
Five years ago, Intel faced an unexpected transition: Intel chief executive Paul Otellini was stepping down, two years before his expected retirement. Former COO Brian Krzanich took Otellini’s place.