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Keyword: intel

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  • Homeless Teen Could Win $100.000 Scholarship

    01/12/2012 9:25:01 PM PST · by takbodan · 7 replies
    Yahoo News ^ | 1/12/12 | Enjoli Francis
    Samantha Garvey is one teenage girl who would rather read something called The Journal of Shellfish Research than Glamour magazine. "What I'm doing is the American dream," she says. The 17-year-old high school senior maintains a 3.9 grade point average at her Brentwood, N.Y., high school, studies Italian and plays the violin. She also has an unusual interest that has recently caught some attention: On Wednesday she was named one of 61 Long Island semifinalists in the national Intel Science Talent Search because of her work studying the effects of predators on ribbed mussels. "I get so excited to tell...
  • The Microprocessor Turns 40: Intel's Monumental Accident

    11/18/2011 5:38:57 PM PST · by Kid Shelleen · 83 replies
    Forbes ^ | 11/15/2011 | Michael Kanellos,
    Today on the 40th anniversary of the 4004, the world’s first microprocessor, the world should salute Intel and the three inventors of that microchip for the accomplishment. But let’s not forget that a little bit of luck and good lawyering helped too. The 4004 was essentially a contract engineering assignment.
  • Happy 40th birthday, Intel 4004!

    11/16/2011 10:34:32 AM PST · by ShadowAce · 10 replies
    The Register ^ | 15 November 2011 | Rik Myslewski
    On November 15, 1971, 40 years ago this Tuesday, an advertisment appeared in Electronic News for a new kind of chip – one that could perform different operations by obeying instructions given to it. That first microprocessor was the Intel 4004, a 4-bit chip developed in 1970 by Intel engineers Federico Faggin, Ted Hoff, and Stanley Mazor in cooperation with the Japanese company Busicom [1] (née the Nippon Calculating Machine Corporation) for that company's adding machines. Busicom held the rights to the 4004 in 1970, but released them to Intel in 1971. Intel then offered the world's first processor for sale,...
  • Intel Chair Open to U.S. Forces in Iran

    10/16/2011 10:39:53 AM PDT · by Nachum · 11 replies
    The Daily Beast ^ | 10/16/11 | staff
    Mike Rogers, the chair of the House intelligence committee, will not rule out the use of military force in Iran after authorities foiled a D.C. terror plot that allegedly had roots in Tehran. “I don’t think you should take it off the table,” Rogers, a Republican, said on ABC’s This Week. Other options, Rogers said, would include gathering a coalition of other nations to condemn Iran or striking against Iranians operating in Iraq. Iran’s government has denied any link to the plot, which aimed to assassinate the Saudi ambassador in Washington, D.C.
  • Introducing the Tizen Project ( Intel sponsored follow on to MeeGo)

    09/28/2011 12:07:14 PM PDT · by Ernest_at_the_Beach
    Anandtech ^ | 9/28/2011 1:00:00 AM | Anand Lal Shimpi
    Posted in smartphones , MeeGo , Tizen , Intel , Samsung When Intel first announced its intentions to enter the smartphone space it needed an OS that demanded the additional silicon Intel was willing to invest in this market. With PCs Intel had Microsoft Windows, an OS that could seemingly always use more processing power. Newer versions of Windows helped Intel sell newer versions of its processors. There was no analog to that in the smartphone market when Intel first started making noise. It was software and styling, not SoCs that differentiated most Android smartphones early on. Obviously times are...
  • AMD pushes FX-8150 to 8.429GHz (Video )

    09/13/2011 1:38:01 PM PDT · by Ernest_at_the_Beach · 25 replies
    Fudzilla ^ | Tuesday, 13 September 2011 16:51 | Slobodan Simic
    At least a part of it In order to make Intel's IDF 2011 parade a bit more sour, AMD announced that its yet to be released FX-8150 CPU was already overclocked to 8.429GHz, which earned the company the Guinness World Record for the highest achieved frequency. AMD's own Sami Maekinen as well as Brian Mclachlan, Pete Hardman and Aaron Schradin had some fun with AMD's eight-core FX-8150 CPU. Just for reference, previous best AMD record was set at 7378.25MHz with the Phenom II 955 Black Edition. Of course, if you take a look at the CPU-Z screenshots, you will...
  • Solar firm files for bankruptcy (SpectraWatt Inc. - Intel spinoff)

    08/24/2011 9:41:57 AM PDT · by Palmetto Patriot · 8 replies
    Times Herald-Record ^ | 08/23/11 | Michael Levensohn
    SpectraWatt, the solar-cell manufacturer that began operating here in early 2010 to great acclaim, only to close a year later, has filed for protection from creditors under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy code. The company is seeking court permission to auction off tens of millions of dollars worth of assets. SpectraWatt blames its failure on a combination of vendor disputes and competitive pressure from countries with higher subsidies and lower costs of production. The petition filed Friday in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Poughkeepsie lists about $34 million in assets and more than $38 million in liabilities. The assets include...
  • Intel's solar spinoff files for bankruptcy

    08/24/2011 7:34:19 AM PDT · by the invisib1e hand · 14 replies
    EE Times ^ | 8/23/2011 | EE Times
    SAN FRANCISCO—Spectrawatt Inc., the solar cell manufacturer that was originally spun off from Intel Corp. in 2008, has filed for bankruptcy protection under Chapter 11 of the U.S. bankruptcy code, according to multiple reports. Spectrawatt (Hopewell Junction, N.Y.) closed its factory last December, laying off 110 people. The factory opened in May 2010. On Tuesday, Middleton, N.Y.'s Times-Herald Record reported that Spectrawatt filed for bankruptcy last week, seeking court permission to auction off tens of millions of dollars worth of assets. The company blames its failure on vendor disputes and competitive pressure from companies that manufacturer solar cells in countries...
  • Why the Hurry? Obama's Loose Lips May Have Cost Us Valuable Intelligence

    05/11/2011 6:38:30 AM PDT · by SeekAndFind · 20 replies
    National Review ^ | 05/11/2011 | Jonah Goldberg
    For a week, people have been asking, “Why won’t the president release Osama bin Laden’s photo?” That’s the wrong question. We should be asking, “Why was Barack Obama in such a hurry to tell us bin Laden was dead?” The White House says the information in bin Laden’s compound is the equivalent of a “small college library,” potentially containing incalculably valuable and unique data on al-Qaeda operations, personnel, and methods. “It’s going to be great even if only 10 percent of it is actionable,” a government official told Politico’s Mike Allen. I’m no expert on such matters — though I’ve...
  • The man who invented the microprocessor

    05/08/2011 7:11:31 PM PDT · by decimon · 13 replies
    BBC ^ | May 4, 2011 | Iain Mackenzie
    Ted Hoff saved his own life, sort of.Deep inside this 73-year-old lies a microprocessor - a tiny computer that controls his pacemaker and, in turn, his heart. Microprocessors were invented by - Ted Hoff, along with a handful of visionary colleagues working at a young Silicon Valley start-up called Intel. This curious quirk of fate is not lost on Ted. "It's a nice feeling," he says. > Ted was recruited and became Intel employee number 12. In 1969, the company was approached by Busicom, a Japanese electronics maker, shopping around for new chips. It wanted something to power a new...
  • Intel’s new revolutionary Tri-Gate 3D transistors (Moore's Law remains valid-video)

    05/09/2011 9:26:42 AM PDT · by Signalman · 12 replies
    WUWT ^ | 5/6/2011 | Anthony Watts
    Intel senior fellow Mark Bohr showed off the company’s revolutionary new 3D transistors in an announcement this week in San Francisco. The power, performance, and real estate gains are impressive. Moore’s Law seems to be holding. Video at Link.
  • How bin Laden Catapulted One Man Into War [Al Qaeda in Iraq!]

    05/03/2011 12:39:14 PM PDT · by Enchante · 3 replies
    Wall Street Journal Online ^ | May 3, 2011 | John Bussey
    Fast forward to a day in Anbar Province, Iraq. Mr. Pottinger, now an intelligence officer supporting an infantry battalion, is standing over the body of a high level al Qaeda operative that his unit has just killed. It was an intense and lengthy manhunt. Mr. Pottinger is rifling through the man’s pockets, looking for additional documentation. Nearby is the mangled body of the man’s guard, who moments before detonated a suicide vest in a last, and failed, effort to kill the attackers. “I was standing over this guy’s corpse, looking down at him and thinking of all of the resources...
  • Osama bin Laden raid yields trove of computer data

    05/02/2011 5:12:39 PM PDT · by Keith in Iowa · 64 replies
    Politico ^ | 5/2/11 | MIKE ALLEN
    The assault force of Navy SEALs snatched a trove of computer drives and disks during their weekend raid on Osama bin Laden’s compound, yielding what a U.S. official called “the mother lode of intelligence.” The special operations forces grabbed personal computers, thumb drives and electronic equipment during the lightning raid that killed bin Laden, officials told POLITICO.
  • VMware, IBM, Juniper, Intel, Yahoo Report Late Tue.

    04/19/2011 10:24:27 AM PDT · by Slyscribe
    IBD's Click ^ | 4/19/2011 | Ed Carson
    Watching Intel now is a little like Michael Jordan’s second comeback. It’s hard to explain to younger folks that the sluggish, behind-the-curve tech giant was a dynamo back in the 1980s and 1990s. Intel has struggled to expand into mobile chips. Now smartphones and tablets are slashing demand for traditional PCs. Can the PC king respond?
  • Taliban Spy Network

    04/16/2011 8:14:14 AM PDT · by darkwing104 · 3 replies
    Coach is Right ^ | Jim Emerson, staff writer
    “Hence it is only the enlightened ruler and the wise general who will use the highest intelligence of the army for purposes of spying and thereby they achieve great results” - Sun Tzu Like espionage networks from the Vietnam War, in Afghanistan, anyone local could be a spy, making it difficult to identify the “friendlies” from the bad guys. Taliban leaders use this historical model to gather intelligence to plan for suicide attacks and decide where to place IED to hamper supply routes. While we can’t be sure, it would be safe to assume that this operation is being...
  • Al Qaeda may already be among Libya's rebels (and Obama sends in the CIA to help them)

    03/30/2011 6:43:03 PM PDT · by tobyhill · 9 replies
    cbs ^ | 3/30/2011 | Joshua Norman
    The roots of al Qaeda were famously planted in Afghanistan in the 1980s, fighting the Soviet Union. Many current al Qaeda fighters, including Osama bin Laden, were then mujaheddin rebels that benefited greatly from American arms and covert military training against a better-equipped fighting force. Today, in Libya, a ragtag group of rebels fight a seesaw battle against Muammar Qaddafi's better-equipped forces, and a debate rages over whether to provide them arms and training. However, whispers are growing that al Qaeda may already be among them, complicating the current debate over arming the rebels. Qaddafi's troops push rebels further from...
  • House Intel chairman: We shouldn't arm Libyan rebels

    03/30/2011 6:38:11 PM PDT · by Nachum · 20 replies
    The Hill ^ | 3/30/11 | Daniel Strauss
    The U.S. shouldn't arm Libyan rebels because there's no telling whose hands those weapons could eventually reach, the chairman of the House Select Intelligence Committee said. “As we publicly debate next steps on Libya, I do not support arming the Libyan rebels at this time," Rep. Mike Rogers (R-Mich.) said in a statement Wednesday. "We need to understand more about the opposition before I would support passing out guns and advanced weapons to them. It’s safe to say what the rebels stand against, but we are a long way from an understanding of what they stand for."
  • Intel plans $5 bln Arizona chip plant by 2013

    02/18/2011 3:43:19 PM PST · by mewykwistmas · 37 replies
    reuters.com ^ | 2/17/2011 | reuters.com
    "Obama met with Apple Inc (AAPL.O) CEO Steve Jobs and other technology industry leaders in northern California on Thursday as part of a campaign to promote technological innovation as a means of boosting the struggling economy and reducing the 9 percent U.S. unemployment rate. Construction of Intel's plant should kick off in the middle of this year, it said in a statement. When completed, the plant will churn out next-generation 14-nanometer line-width transistors and microchip wafers of 300 millimeters. Intel said in October it plans to spend $6 billion to $8 billion on high-tech manufacturing facilities in Arizona and Oregon,...
  • Intel @ MWC 2011: Atom-Based Medfield SoC Now Sampling, Low-Power LTE Modems In 2012

    02/15/2011 9:35:13 AM PST · by Ernest_at_the_Beach
    Anandtech ^ | 2/14/2011 8:00:00 AM | Ryan Smith
    Though we still like to think of Intel first and foremost as a computer CPU company, the fact of the matter is the company is trying its hardest to expand their horizons. Among their expansion efforts are a push in to the smartphone space, and to further that Intel is at Mobile World Congress 2011 making their latest smartphone-related announcements. The first announcement, and of course the one nearest and dearest to our hearts, is on the CPU side of things. Medfield – Intel’s next-generation Atom-based smartphone SoC is now sampling and will ship later this year. Intel still hasn’t...
  • Intel Shows Off MeeGo Tablet User Experience

    02/15/2011 9:21:26 AM PST · by Ernest_at_the_Beach · 2 replies
    Anandtech ^ | 2/14/2011 6:30:00 AM | Anand Lal Shimpi
    While I was scheduling my Mobile World Congress meetings I got an email request from Intel. It wanted to give me a quick tour of the latest MeeGo UI for tablets. MeeGo, as you may remember, was the combination of Intel's Moblin OS and Nokia's own efforts. While MeeGo isn't completely abandoned by Nokia, it's looking unlikely that Nokia will be a major player in it going forward considering the fresh partnership with Microsoft. Intel is still trucking away with MeeGo and unfortunately appears to be retaining the less-than-ideal name despite the recent shakeup with its partner (at least Moblin...