Intel invited us down to go hands on with their long-delayed 10th gen, 10nm processors and put them to the test. These processors are a key step in improving mobile performance, and could lead to ...
Intel sees a "clear way" to manufacturing chips under 10 nanometers and when the semiconductor industry transitions to 450mm silicon wafers around 2012, the number of companies that run their own fabs ...
BARCELONA, Spain — Intel kicked off MWC 2019 announcing a high-profile customer — Ericsson — and new products for 5G and edge computing. Ericsson will use Intel’s 10-nanometer (nm) system-on-chip (SoC ...
So what happens after 7nm? At some point you cant go to zero so how does intel continue its growth? Click to expand... After nanometers we may go to picometers. 1 nm ...
Intel today unveiled new field programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) – the Intel Agilex FPGA family – for data- and compute-intensive workloads like artificial intelligence (AI) across the network, cloud, ...
Last week Intel launched its new 12th Gen CPUs, and yesterday Leo and Luke got time for a (virtual) sit down chat. They ...
Even with Intel's 10nm fabrication, Intel's client-side business is faring well. Intel's planned 7nm launch will likely improve Intel's competitiveness. Intel's launch of Intel 4, 7nm fabrication, ...
Cnet reporter Stephen Shankland recently took a tour(Opens in a new window) of Intel's sprawling Fab 42 in Chandler, Arizona, and Intel let him take a peak at a lot ...
Intel's financial turnaround is showing positive signs, with an uptrend in share price and a recovery in revenue and earnings. The success of Intel's plan to achieve 4 nodes in 5 years will determine ...
In a nutshell: Earlier this month, several outlets reported delays to Intel's upcoming 3nm-based technologies. CEO Pat Gelsinger squashed those rumors during Intel's Capital Allocation Update call, ...
In the fourth week of 'Leo Says' - our grumpy hero discusses what Intel are doing, and more importantly, what they seem to be ...
Actually nope. You can compare. just not directly. You take all the flagship chips each foundry manufactures, say AMD processors and cards and apple chips in the case of TSMC, Nvidia Cards, IBM PPCs ...