Greatest growth yet to come
Intel's senior vice president and general manager of sales and marketing sees a future of growing technology use, with ever more chip sales. Anand Chandrasekher chats with CNET News.com's Michael Kanellos.
Intel's senior vice president and general manager of sales and marketing sees a future of growing technology use, with ever more chip sales. Anand Chandrasekher chats with CNET News.com's Michael Kanellos.
At the Intel Developer Forum in San Francisco, Intel CEO Paul Otellini shows the company's new wireless display technology. Using a WiDi video chip, users can stream HD video and games from their laptop and desktop PC to a tablet device.
Intel says CET can protect against ROP/JOP/COP malware.
At the Intel Developers Forum in San Francisco, Intel co-founder Gordon Moore discusses the end of Moore's Law, which he believes will hit a wall in the next 10 to 15 years.
At the Intel Developer Forum in San Francisco, Intel CEO Paul Otellini shows off a silicon wafer housing chips made with 22-nanometer process technology. Chips made on that process will be ready for market in 2011.
Intel says the UK is not turning out enough tech grads but, like other multinationals, the company is doing its bit to help.
At the Intel Developer Forum in San Francisco, Executive Vice President Sean Maloney demonstrates some new embedded technologies. He shows off a new digital billboard and virtual slot machine that can be remotely managed and reprogrammed on the fly using Intel's vPro processor technology.
A five minute overview of Intel Integrated Performance Primitives, a collection of routines that get better performance than simply using an optimizing compiler on equivalent code.
Intel announces what it calls a new tier of memory for memory-intensive workloads.
At the Intel Developer Forum in San Francisco, Intel CTO Justin Rattner discusses "context-aware computing." The new technology will soon be embedded in mobile devices and will be able to learn about who you are, where you are, how you're feeling, and what you want. Tim Jarrell, publisher of Fodor's Travel, demos how the technology works as a personal vacation assistant for travelers to San Francisco.