Intel has signaled a better-than-average start for 2005 by raising its revenue estimate for the first quarter. In its traditional midquarter update statement, the chipmaker on Thursday said its ...
In a new report from The New York Times, we're learning that former Intel CEO Pat Otellini pitched the idea of buying NVIDIA during a board meeting at the time, with the intent that the design of ...
Advanced Micro Devices claims that Intel and Apple cut a deal to use Intel processors only. Intel denies the claim and says Apple's decision to go with Intel chips was based on the merits. Brooke ...
(This article originally appeared in the Mercury News on May 16, 2005.) Paul Otellini becomes Intel’s chief executive Wednesday, the first non-engineer to head the world’s largest chip maker. But that ...
Dr. Chris Hillman, Global AI Lead at Teradata, joins eSpeaks to explore why open data ecosystems are becoming essential for enterprise AI success. In this episode, he breaks down how openness — in ...
After saying in February that they likely would not ship 64-bit desktop processors until the time Longhorn shipped, Intel has done an about-face and now plans to release 64-bit desktop CPUs beginning ...
Intel finally provided some decent news for investors in 2006, beating lowered expectations for its third quarter despite coming in way short of last year's figures. During the third quarter, or the ...
Intel Corp.’s products for the digital home and digital office in 2005 will give consumers and IT managers more capabilities than just raw performance, and the company plans to highlight those ...
SAN MATEO, Calif. — Jockeying for position in the server CPU race, Intel Corp. announced on Friday (Nov. 14) that it will use multithreading and a whopping 24 Mbits of cache in the Montecito version ...
The lifeblood of digital business or the backbone of digital products? Tell us whether it's what's "Inside" that really counts. Our writers are doing this for fun. They are enjoying the spirit of ...
SAN FRANCISCO – The sense of relief on the faces of hardware developers, analysts and Intel Corp. employees was the lasting image of this week’s Spring Intel Developer Forum (IDF) in San Francisco.
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