Intel has teamed up with a Taiwanese motherboard vendor to tap China’s burgeoning Internet cafe market, on the heels of a similar announcement earlier this year by rival Advanced Micro Devices (AMD).
To handle the demands of the next-generation Internet, a new layer of intelligent nodes and services need to grow over the existing Internet structure, said Intel Chief Technology Officer Pat ...
Intel’s Atom processor has been stealing the limelight when it comes to small, portable Internet devices, but Intel rivals Arm and Texas Instruments hope to change that. The two companies held a joint ...
Intel is charging fast into lucrative vertical markets with new partner designations and benefits for education and retail-focused Internet of Things. The chip giant for the first time is giving ...
More and more end users are catching the Internet-driven entertainment fever, but many own PCs that lack the power to deliver the experience they demand. Intel's response is a quad-core processor that ...
Intel quietly revealed plans to end the Edison, Galileo, and Joule modules, exposing yet again how it had bowed and warped under years of pressure from ARM. Last year, Intel stopped selling SoCs for ...
Wireless giant Verizon is making a big bet on television delivered via the Internet. Today the company announced that it is buying up Intel’s failed pay-TV service, called OnCue. Though financial ...
Intel on Monday announced it will acquire Mobileye in a $15.3 billion acquisition, deepening the chip manufacturer's capabilities around connected cars. Intel CEO Brian Krzanich said Mobileye, which ...
Intel's new Quark is designed to fit power consumption targets and devices where even the low-powered Atom can't currently compete. With a new embedded architecture and customized silicon blocks, this ...
As developments go, this one is a bombshell. For the first time, Intel has agreed to build ARM chips based on its prime competitor's architecture, for another company. For decades, Intel was an ...
A technology guru at Intel Corp. predict that the internet will look significantly different in five to 10 years, when much of it will be three dimensional, or 3D. Sean Koehl, a technology evangelist ...