Intel will preview a multicore future this week during the Fall Intel Developer Forum in San Francisco as it tries to leave behind a tumultuous year plagued by product delays and road-map revisions.
Intel Corp. announced several changes yesterday to its road map for server processors, delaying its first dual-core Itanium 2 processor and replacing a future multicore Xeon processor with a new ...
eWEEK content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More. SAN JOSE, Calif.—Intel Corp.s enterprise processor road ...
Intel will dramatically shake up its microprocessor road map to meet the demand for very-low-power processors and to fend off the competitive threat from rival chip design company ARM, CEO Paul ...
With its eyes set toward the end of the decade, Intel intends on arriving at a powerfully diminutive 1.4nm node — or just one-tenth the size of its desktop node today — by 2029. Intel hopes that its ...
Microprocessor giant Intel prides itself on pushing out cutting-edge technology at a lightning-fast pace. But the current economy calls into question whether the vendor's strategy still makes sense.
As Intel Corp. gets ready to reveal new information about its upcoming low-power Silverthorne processor at the International Solid State Circuits Conference this week, it’s becoming clear that the ...
Let's take a look at Intel's recently updated processor road map. These road maps don't offer too many product or precise launch schedule details, but they do help investors get a sense of roughly ...
Intel will release new Atom chips for smartphones and tablets next year as it chases a goal of boosting mobile chip graphics performance by 15 times and CPU performance by five times by 2016. The ...
On March 28, Intel executives delved into some additional details of its Penryn line of processors and also offered a glimpse at its Nehalem architecture, which the company said could offer up to ...
AMD beat Intel to market with key technologies such as 64-bit computing and dual-core processors, and its chips have outperformed Intel's in the increasingly critical performance-per- watt metric.
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