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  1. #16
    Tech Ubër-Dominus Avatar de Jorge-Vieira
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    Nine Intel Employees Receive Society of Women Engineer Awards

    Nine Intel employees recently received Society of Women Engineer Awards. The annual awards program recognizes men and women who enhance the engineering profession through contributions to industry, education and the community. Congratulations to the following Intel award recipients: Hussein K. Mecklai (Rodney D. Chipp Memorial Award); Patty Lopez, Ph.D. (Advocating Women in Engineering Award); Joan Tafoya (Global Leadership Award); Lakecia Gunter and Rahima K. Mohammed, Ph.D. (Prism Awards); Barbara H. McAllister (Spark Award); Sumita Basu, Ph.D. and Shaila Murty, (Emerging Leader Award); and Lynda Grindstaff (Fellow Grade Award). Award recipients will be honored at a ceremony at WE15, the world’s largest conference for women engineers in October.
    Noticia:
    http://www.hardocp.com/news/2015/08/...s#.VdNVs5f0OTQ
    http://www.portugal-tech.pt/image.php?type=sigpic&userid=566&dateline=1384876765

  2. #17
    Tech Ubër-Dominus Avatar de Jorge-Vieira
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    The End Of An Era: With Thanks And Gratitude For An Intel PR Professional



    There’s an old saying that goes something like “people do business with people they like.” If any shred of that adage is true, then Intel’s soon exiting PR Manager, Dan Snyder, has it “going on,” so to speak, on a number of levels. Dan has the privilege and good fortune to work for one of the most capable and powerful semiconductor manufacturers on the planet. With that power and capability comes a lot of attention and focus. Almost justifiably so, Dan could have been very hard to approach, tougher to access and even more difficult perhaps to relate to. Why? Because he works for Intel, a company affectionately referred to as “Chipzilla” over the years and frankly, as members of the press, you may or may not justify the blip on his radar screen or the bandwidth to engage with him. It’s simple physics and nothing personal. When you’re Intel PR, you get a lot of attention and a lot of requests and there are only so many hours in a day and even fewer in a week.

    However, when Dan took over at Intel for his then semi-retiring predecessor, George Alfs (a man cut very much from the same cloth as Dan), he quickly got up to speed with us and it was readily apparent that he was looking to develop valuable, lasting relationships with members of the press and analyst community. Dan could have had his contact filters dialed up high, just to get through the day, but that just isn’t his style. A response was always given (whether you liked it or not) and any reasonable action item followed-up on.

    After a few years of working with this gentleman had passed, my business partner Marco and I began to realize that “Dan The Man” as we call him, from Intel, was the real deal. Not only was he highly professional, diligent, skilled, informed and quick to follow-up in his approach, he “got it.” Referring to someone that “gets it” is sometime noted casually in business. It's typically referring to someone you work with that has a knack for knowing just what needs to be done and then appropriately responding in a timely manner. You don’t have to worry about where you stand with people that “get it.” They’re transparent and there’s no mystery. You don’t have to worry about whether or not they’ll do what they say. People that "get it" say what they’ll do and then do what they said, every time, without fail. People that “get it” not only understand their business partner’s needs and goals, but they find a way to mesh those needs with the goals of the company they work for, one way or another and intrinsically so, usually without much if any guidance. They truly "get" the bigger picture.

    Dan Snyder of Intel Corporation gets it and always has. He will be sorely missed.

    This week at Intel Developer’s Forum in San Francisco, Dan informed key members of the Tech press community that he was moving on from his PR Manager’s role at Intel. Believe me when I tell you, a collective gasp was let out across the Internet. Dan has been working with us for a very long time, from Conroe to Skulltrail, Haswell and Skylake and every winding path (or board etch) in between. We had been to so many CES, IDF and other conferences with him, endless conference calls and meetings, that the years just seemed to blur together. He wasn’t just a PR Manager at Intel. He was/is a fixture; an employee so ingrained in the company he works for, that his persona and personal brand equity pays dividends virtually daily for the company in return, and in spades.


    Dan, on top of it as usual...

    In this business (in any business really but especially in Tech) you have to learn to handle the constant change and to just roll with it. It’s quite literally evolve or die in this space. Still, not working with Dan Snyder of Intel PR feels like an unimaginable reality. Dan was and is Intel for so many in the professional Tech press and analyst industries.

    At the risk of sounding a little sappy, one simple word comes to mind when we here at HotHardware.com think of Dan Snyder from Intel – “revered.” For us here at Hot Hardware Dan is the best in the business. People do business with people they like. It's common sense and human nature. It has truly been an honor and unique privilege to work with Dan for the past decade or more.

    Great working with you Dan. We’ll carry on of course but it just won’t be the same without you.

    Dave Altavilla
    Editor In Chief


    Members of ASUS, Western Digital, HotHardware.com And Dan Snyder (far right, back) - CES 2011
    Noticia:
    http://hothardware.com/blogs/post/th...r-professional
    http://www.portugal-tech.pt/image.php?type=sigpic&userid=566&dateline=1384876765

  3. #18
    Tech Ubër-Dominus Avatar de Jorge-Vieira
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    Intel: Our foundry business is well, we have new customers

    Brian Krzanich, chief executive officer of Intel Corp., claims that despite of lack of any announcements concerning its contract semiconductor manufacturing business unit, the latter is growing and is still an important opportunity for the chip giant. Moreover, it has new customers that Intel just cannot name.
    Intel established its Intel Custom Foundry (ICF) contract manufacturing division within its technology and manufacturing group in early 2010, but so far, IFC has not secured any tangible market share in the foundry market, according to analysts. Intel has been traditionally extremely tight-lipped about IFC’s ongoing endeavours, future plans, prospects and clients. In May, 2015, Sunit Rikhi, general manager of Intel Custom Foundry, retired and the replacement is yet to be named.

    Since its foundation, Intel Custom Foundry has announced only six customers: Altera (now a division of Intel), Achronix Semiconductor, Tabula (defunct), Netronome, Microsemi and Panasonic. By contrast, leading foundries like Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., GlobalFoundries and United Microelectronics Corp. have hundreds of customers. But while there are only six clients officially, there are a lot of companies, who work with IFC, according to Brian Krzanich.
    “The foundry business continues to go well,” chief executive of Intel said in an interview with EETimes. “We have new customers. Altera is a customer. A lot of customers we are working with do not want to announce until they are ready to go to market because they have relationships with other foundries. They want to stay quiet. But we are out getting new customers all the time.”

    Intel needs its contract semiconductor business to maximize utilization of its production facilities and offset increasing costs of research and development (R&D) of new manufacturing processes. Every new fabrication process costs more than the previous one and the cost of new fabs is growing as well. Today, R&D costs of one process technology total $1 – $1.5 billion, whereas capital investments in a new production facility typically exceed $6 billion. Future process technologies will get even more expensive and the cost of a 450mm semiconductor fabrication plant will be around $10 billion. In a bid to keep per-chip costs low, Intel and other makers of ICs [integrated circuits] need to maximize utilization of their fabs, which means that either Intel has to constantly increase its chip sales, or produce chips for others.
    At present it is unknown how much money does Intel earn by making chips for other developers. It is also unclear whether the company produces any ICs for its clients using 14nm FinFET process technology.
    Noticia:
    http://www.kitguru.net/components/an...new-customers/


    Sendo a Intel líder no processo de fabrico e muito provavelmente a sua facturação seja superior a todos os outros concorrentes juntos, a Intel trabalha com o objectivo de produzir os seus próprios produtos e só isso deve chegar para cobrir todo o investimento feito em R&D.
    http://www.portugal-tech.pt/image.php?type=sigpic&userid=566&dateline=1384876765

  4. #19
    Tech Ubër-Dominus Avatar de Jorge-Vieira
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    CSIRO picks Intel's Edison for bee-tracking project

    Australia's CSIRO has built a honeybee-tracking kit which combines Intel's Edison platform with thousands of teeny-tiny RFID tags glued to the backs of honeybees.







    Intel has announced that it has partnered with the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) of Australia in a project which uses the Edison microcomputer to track bee activity.


    In an effort to understand colony collapse disorder, which is wiping out bee populations across the globe, CSIRO has joined forces with Intel to develop an analysis platform which combines the company's low-power ultra-compact Edison single-board computer with small radiofrequency identification (RFID) tags fitted to the bees themselves. The Edison-powered monitoring systems are placed inside the beehive and records when each RFID-tagged bee passes by. Combined with environmental sensors linked to the Edison, this provides data which could be used to help protect bee populations around the globe.

    'Bee colonies are collapsing around the world and we don’t know why,' explained Professor Paulo de Souza, Office of the Chief Executive Science Leader at CSIRO. 'Due to the urgent and global nature of this issue, we saw the need to develop a methodology that any scientist could easily deploy. This way we can share and compare data from around the world to collaboratively investigate bee health. This united effort is a fantastic example of the Internet of Things. The Intel Edison Breakout Board kit is the perfect platform for this type of research. It’s incredibly reliable, small in size, flexible with programming, and has low power consumption. It’s also easily customisable which means that if a scientist has a sensor they would like to add, they can virtually plug in and play.'

    The Edison was originally unveiled as an SD-card format microcomputer powered by Intel's ultra-low-power Quark processor. The Quark's dated, Pentium-based instructions set led to poor performance, however, and the company soon switched to the Atom chip while retaining the Quark as a co-processor. A move away from the SD format followed, with the final design taking the form of a stamp-sized computer-on-module which connects to open-standard break-out boards.

    The bee-tracking project began with a trial outing in Hobart, Tasmania, with 10,000 RFID tags being fitted to the backs of bees. Following its success, CSIRO is looking for collaborators to pick up kits based on the technology and fit them to their local hives as a means of building a global picture of bee activity and health, under the banner of CSIRO's Global Initiative for Honeybee Health (GIHH) project. More information on both the project and the kit is available from the official website.
    Noticia:
    http://www.bit-tech.net/news/bits/20...intel-edison/1
    http://www.portugal-tech.pt/image.php?type=sigpic&userid=566&dateline=1384876765

  5. #20
    Tech Ubër-Dominus Avatar de Jorge-Vieira
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    Intel and BlueData Collaborate to Simplify Big Data Infrastructure

    ntel Corporation and BlueData today announced a broad strategic technology and business collaboration, as well as an additional equity investment in BlueData from Intel Capital. This relationship will bring together BlueData's infrastructure software for big data with the leading data center architecture based on Intel® Xeon® processor technology. The goal is to accelerate the adoption of big data solutions by simplifying deployment. This builds upon Intel's existing investments and initiatives in the big data market, including Intel's strategic collaboration with Cloudera* for Apache Hadoop* as well as recent projects focused on Apache Spark*.
    Noticia:
    http://www.hardocp.com/news/2015/08/...e#.Vdyaw5f0OTQ
    http://www.portugal-tech.pt/image.php?type=sigpic&userid=566&dateline=1384876765

  6. #21
    Tech Ubër-Dominus Avatar de Jorge-Vieira
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    Intel gets into drones



    Buy our chips or else

    Chipmaker Intel is taking its competitive game up a notch by investing in its own drones.

    Chipzilla has written a cheque for more than US$60 million to Yuneec International, a Chinese aviation company and drone maker.
    This is not the first time that the Chipmaker has invested in drones. It has written smaller amounts for the drone makers Airware and PrecisionHawk. The Yuneec deal is its largest investment in a drone company yet.
    Apparently Intel thinks that drones are potential computing platforms for its processors.
    Intel CEO Brian Krzanich said he believed in a smart and connected world. And one of the best ways to bring that smart and connected world to everyone and everywhere has been drones.
    Amazon and Google are developing drones as they seek new ways to deliver items to consumers, Intel just wants to make sure that its chips are delivering the payload. There is no indication that it is building a secret airforce which it will use to take down competition – that would be silly.
    Yuneec makes a range of drones built for aerial photography and imaging. Its technology also powers manned electric aircraft.
    Noticia:
    http://www.fudzilla.com/news/wearabl...ts-into-drones


    Será que os drones trazem este logotipo
    http://www.portugal-tech.pt/image.php?type=sigpic&userid=566&dateline=1384876765

  7. #22
    Tech Ubër-Dominus Avatar de Jorge-Vieira
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    OpenStack missing important bits says Intel



    Promises to help it out

    Intel has told OpenStack fans that their favourite software is missing some important bits, and it wants to help out.

    Intel told the OpenStack Silicon Valley conference to expand on its commitment to OpenStack as the platform to create more cloudy goodness.
    Diane Bryant, senior vice president and general manager of Intel's Data Centre Group said that Chipzilla uses OpenStack infrastructure in its data centres and has done so since 2011.
    But she said that Intel faced similar problems to other companies, in that its internal servers were running at about 10 percent utilisation and it took too long to provision new infrastructure. The way around this was building it into a private infrastructure-as-a-service cloud instead, using OpenStack to address the problems.
    Intel is getting behind OpenStack by putting investment and engineering resources into the open-source project to help it advance. Intel says the platform needs to be more enterprise-ready.
    "There are still features missing from OpenStack that enterprises require, such as failover, version control, management to integrate into existing infrastructure, ticketing and monitoring," she said.

    "Our goal at Intel is to eliminate impediments to growth and create tens of thousands of new clouds. Building a cloud should be as seamless and easy as loading a new operating system. To make this possible, we will invest in the cloud stack, optimise for high efficiency and work with the community to ensure interoperability."
    As part of the "Cloud for All" initiative Intel is working with Rackspace, with which it has already partnered to set up the OpenStack Innovation Centre. Mirantis is engineering the equivalent capabilities into OpenStack.
    Boris Renski, co-founder of Mirantis, said that Intel's increased involvement had significant symbolic value.
    "OpenStack is hard, but not too long ago Linux was hard, such that the most common consumption model was shipping it ready installed on a server," he said.
    Noticia:
    http://www.fudzilla.com/news/38584-o...its-says-intel
    http://www.portugal-tech.pt/image.php?type=sigpic&userid=566&dateline=1384876765

  8. #23
    Tech Ubër-Dominus Avatar de Jorge-Vieira
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    Intel Security To Showcase Cloud Security Solutions At VMworld

    Intel will be exhibiting at VMworld, Aug. 30-Sept. 3, in booth #1529. Intel Security will host two demo stations and two breakout sessions focused on its advanced security services for the software defined data center. The demos will highlight McAfee MOVE AV, McAfee vNSP and the Intel Security Controller showing how they integrate with VMware NSX. The breakout session titled "Data Center in Transition – A Journey to a Secure Hybrid Data Center" is scheduled for Wednesday, September 2, from 11AM to 12PM PT. The second session, "Utilizing Software Defined Data Centers (SDDC) to Enable Advanced Threat Protection in Cloud Environments" is scheduled for Thursday, September 3, from 12PM to 1PM PT and will feature Matt Ferrari, CTO of ClearDATA, discussing how he uses this solution to provide advanced security services to its healthcare application customers. To see Intel Security demos, stop by the Intel booth #1529 at VMworld, at Moscone Center in San Francisco.
    Noticia:
    http://www.hardocp.com/news/2015/08/...d#.VeRdnpf0OTQ
    http://www.portugal-tech.pt/image.php?type=sigpic&userid=566&dateline=1384876765

  9. #24
    Tech Ubër-Dominus Avatar de Jorge-Vieira
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    Intel might have miffed the Tablet market



    Why do you need one?


    As Intel unveiled its Skylake chips yesterday it was hammering in another nail in the coffin of tablets.

    Tablet sales have been slumping as the world discovers that Steve Jobs dreams of keyboardless netbooks were just an Apple Kool-Aid inspired bad trip.
    While Intel has been spending a fortune trying to get its chips under the bonnets of the various Apple clones, Skylake might be the tool, which disembowels the technology.
    Skylake will allow a PC to cut its weight and thickness in half, while speeding up the overall performance. It needs less heating, making some laptops go fanless, and almost no wires with its USB-C cable compatibility.
    Notebooks with Skylake will look sleek as tablets, have a great battery life, a keyboard you can type on and be light. It will also have all the Windows 10 goodness you can eat which makes your device a PC rather than a poxy mobile phone
    The question is why would you bother with a standalone tablet?
    IDC analyst Loren Loverde warned that the new features supported by Skylake, and in combination with Windows 10, will enable more attractive PC designs that will address today's needs better than older products, and compete better with tablets and phones.
    Another IDC analyst, Shane Rau, said that it would now be the PC markets, which will make a comeback.
    But that doesn't mean the tablet market will disappear overnight. Skylake will not be available on laptops until later this year, and it takes a long time to revive a market as big as the PC business.
    The Tame Apple Press insists that Apple will save the tablet with its even bigger iPad later this year.
    It is odd to see Apple pundits forced to peddle out-of-date old-fashioned technology, however amusing this might be. Sooner or later someone is going to have to admit that tablets were never the game changer Apple said they were.
    Noticia:
    http://www.fudzilla.com/news/38639-i...-tablet-market
    http://www.portugal-tech.pt/image.php?type=sigpic&userid=566&dateline=1384876765

  10. #25
    Tech Ubër-Dominus Avatar de Jorge-Vieira
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    Intel Invests US$50 Million to Advance Quantum Computing

    Today Intel Corporation announced a 10-year collaborative relationship with the Delft University of Technology and TNO, the Dutch Organisation for Applied Research, to accelerate advancements in quantum computing. To achieve this goal, Intel will invest US$50 million and will provide significant engineering resources both on-site and at Intel, as well as technical support. Quantum computing holds the promise of solving complex problems that are practically insurmountable today, including intricate simulations such as large-scale financial analysis and more effective drug development. Quantum computing is an area of research that Intel has been exploring because it has the potential to augment the capabilities of tomorrow's high performance computers.
    Noticia:
    http://www.hardocp.com/news/2015/09/...g#.VehKUpf0OTQ
    http://www.portugal-tech.pt/image.php?type=sigpic&userid=566&dateline=1384876765

  11. #26
    Tech Ubër-Dominus Avatar de Jorge-Vieira
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    Intel Announces Intel Media Server Studio 2016

    Today, Intel announced Intel® Media Server Studio 2016, a family of software products that includes Intel® Video Pro Analyzer and Intel® Stress Bitstreams and Encoder. Created for media and cloud developers as well as video professionals and broadcasters, these products help them create solutions that deliver faster video downloads and high-quality streaming video. Intel Media Server Studio 2016 enables real-time 4K HEVC video encoding on select Intel® Xeon® E5 processors and delivers a large improvement in streaming density for Xeon E5, E3, and Intel® Core™ i7 platforms, of up to 1.5 times faster and 10 percent better visual quality than the 2015 version. The tools support the BT.2020 color gamut on Ultra HD TVs, providing viewers a TV color palette that more accurately resembles real life. Developers can also build robust video coding solutions and deeply analyze and debug HEVC, VP9, AVC and MPEG-2 video streams. Intel Video Pro Analyzer 2016 and Intel Stress Bitstreams and Encoder 2016 will be available on Sept.14, and Intel Media Server Studio 2016 editions will launch in the coming weeks. See the Intel Media Server Studio products in action at IBC in Amsterdam, September 11-15, in Hall 4, booth #B72.
    Noticia:
    http://www.hardocp.com/news/2015/09/...6#.Vemnb5f0OTQ
    http://www.portugal-tech.pt/image.php?type=sigpic&userid=566&dateline=1384876765

  12. #27
    Tech Ubër-Dominus Avatar de Jorge-Vieira
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    Intel Bails On High School ‘Science Talent Search’ It Has Sponsored Since 1998

    Intel has chosen to end support for the Science Talent Search, an annual science and mathematics competition for American high school students. As part of the contest, each year 40 finalists are brought to Washington for meetings with government leaders and industry professionals.

    The competition began as an essay contest in 1942 with the topic "How science can help win the war." The male winner, known as "Top Boy," later developed an artificial kidney, while the "Top Girl" would go on to become an ophthalmologist. Since its inception, competitors have included eight Nobel Prize winners. Also among the contest's ranks through the years are university professors, accomplished scientists, and other prominent individuals.



    Intel has been sponsoring the competition since 1998. The New York Times called Intel's decision to drop support a "puzzling" one considering it costs $6 million a year, a drop in the buck compared to Intel's annual revenue, which was reported at $55.6 billion in 2014.

    A former chief executive of Intel said he was "surprised and a little disappointed" at the turn of events. He also indicated that Intel seems "more interested in applied things," such as the Maker Faire.

    The contest continues to be popular with around 1,800 applications a year. Back in March of this year, President Obama met with finalists at the White House. Going forward, it's expected that another corporation will step in to support the program once Intel's commitment ends in 2017, with Google named as a potential candidate.


    http://www.portugal-tech.pt/image.php?type=sigpic&userid=566&dateline=1384876765

  13. #28
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    Intel pounces on better bandwidth router chips



    Puma 7 lands on its paws

    Intel has released its new Puma 7 DOCSIS 3.1 chip and while router chips are normally a bit of a yawn this one could lead to multi-gigabit cable modems.

    Puma 7 chip is fabricated on the same 14-nm process as Intel's latest 'Skylake' Core chips that mean that it can run cool in fanless designs. OK a router normally does not need a fan, but it does mean that the beast will be a lot more energy efficient.
    Intel said that inside it is a dual-core Atom chip, Intel said, which can run Linux or another OS through a virtualisation feature.
    Other features include support a packet accelerator, support for third-party 4x4 MIMO Wi-Fi and even voice recognition modules, the company said. Puma 7 supports HyperScan, which is a way for the chip to do some on-the-fly scanning for malware or potential hackers.
    DOCSIS 3.1 is the next evolutionary step in cable modems because it allows 10 Gbps down and 1 Gbps upstream. Even if four Mbps downstream speeds are more realistic, that is enough for simultaneous 4K streams.
    Chipzilla is facing some competition. Comcast and Liberty Global have supported a DOCSIS 3.1 chip manufactured by Broadcom. ST Micro has also shown off its own system.
    Noticia:
    http://www.fudzilla.com/news/38728-i...andwidth-chips
    http://www.portugal-tech.pt/image.php?type=sigpic&userid=566&dateline=1384876765

  14. #29
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    Intel thinks PCs will come back



    But tablets are history

    The PC will make a comeback, but the so-called Tablet revolution is history, according to the Chipmaker who missed out on it.

    Kirk Skaugen, GM of Intel's client computing group told the Intel Global Capital Summit that there are more than a billion PCs that are more than three years old and a third of a billion that are over five years old. People are coming back to the PC and refreshing their systems.
    It used to be that people upgraded every two years or so, but in the last five years silicon has got so powerful that no one saw the need. The problem is that they still don’t and Skaugen hopes that two-in-one detachable-screen systems, will be a major growth driver.
    Sales of two-in-one systems are up 150 per cent, he claimed, and are leading to people wanting to refresh their PCs up to 18 months earlier than they would have. Mini computers are another growth market.
    Without the growth in two-in-ones, the laptop market in the US would have shown 4 per cent negative growth, Skaugen said. However the new forms created a one per cent growth. He thinks the new hardware that such systems are starting to carry, particularly 3D cameras are going to have people rushing back to laptops.
    The big loser in all of this is going to be the tablet market. Intel had got the growth in tablets wrong, he said, and is now revising its forecasts.
    "18 months ago many people thought that tablet sales were going to cross over PCs in 2014. Now we're sure they won't ever. Intel has taken a billion units out of our forecasts in the last year," he said.
    That is just as well because Intel never made a sustainable dent into the tablet market, but it also fulfilled our predictions that the technology never solved any problems. It was still the same toy that Microsoft had been attempting to sell without success for years and they never had a use.
    Noticia:
    http://www.fudzilla.com/news/process...will-come-back
    http://www.portugal-tech.pt/image.php?type=sigpic&userid=566&dateline=1384876765

  15. #30
    Tech Ubër-Dominus Avatar de Jorge-Vieira
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    Intel dumps a pile of cash in China



    Targeted building up of Chinese firms

    Intel Capital is putting a ton of cash into Chinese businesses in a move that will get it onside with the Chinese government.

    According to Digitimes, Intel has invested $500 million in 2015. This is on top of the $168 million invested last year and a separate US$1 billion investment in the Tsinghua Unigroup and a US$5.5 billion investment to upgrade its wafer foundry in Dalian.
    Intel Capital has written cheques for $60 million investment in Hong Kong-based unmanned aerial vehicle manufacturer Yuneec and $67 million investment in eight China-based companies covering industries such as smart device equipment, robots and cloud computing service applications.
    Intel recently announced investment in China-based Perfant Technology, a company that mainly focuses on developing artificial intelligence, machine vision, 3D modelling and virtual reality technologies. Perfant's 360-degree camera, Eyesir, is capable of being used for travel, aerial and virtual reality applications.
    Perfant will launch a new product designed based on Intel's RealSense technology.
    The move is interesting as it places Intel on the side of the Chinese government, which wants to encourage the country’s home grown businesses as the expense of big multinationals, like Intel. At the same time if they take off, Intel will have access to the technology and have a back door into those organisations.
    Noticia:
    http://www.fudzilla.com/news/39183-i...-cash-in-china
    http://www.portugal-tech.pt/image.php?type=sigpic&userid=566&dateline=1384876765

 

 
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