64-bit Windows: "A long time coming" Video
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The Leopard with a Time Machine
Apple Computer's vice president of platform experience, Scott Forstall, demonstrates the company's new application "Time Machine." Users can travel through time by scrolling through different windows that represent days, looking for the file they need. The keynote took place Monday at Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference 2006 in San Francisco.
Notebooks get a boost with new Intel Centrino
At an Intel press conference in San Francisco, Intel's vice president and general manager of the mobile platforms group, Mooly Eden, demos the company's next generation of mobile microprocessors. Eden shows how the new mobile chips deliver better performance on notebooks in the areas of 3D gaming, financial spreadsheets and the Windows Vista OS.
Intel shows off 32/64-bit processing
At the Intel Developer Forum in San Francisco, Intel CEO Craig Barrett announces and demonstrates 64-bit extensions to the company's existing x86 architecture.
Intel takes on the remote-control market
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At the Intel Developer Forum in San Francisco, Intel President Paul Otellini points to multicore computing and WiMax as the next areas of performance improvement and market growth for businesses and consumers.
Jim Allchin and his Windows legacy
Perhaps more than any single executive at Microsoft--including Chairman Bill Gates and CEO Steve Ballmer--Jim Allchin's reputation will be forever linked to his stewardship over the development of Windows. Now, with the imminent shipment of the Vista operating system, Allchin is finishing his 17-year career with Microsoft. Join CNET News.com's Charlie Cooper, Mike Ricciuti and Ina Fried as they assess the Allchin legacy on this week's edition of the News.com Reporters' Roundtable.
Intel's Otellini: Terabyte per second
Intel CEO and President Paul Otellini told a crowd at the Intel Developers Forum in San Francisco to expect future processors to exchange data at a terabyte per second. That's in five years when Intel roles out its 80-core chips. The first quad-core processors are expected in November 2006.
Exercise equipment with Intel inside
CNET News.com's Michael Kanellos speaks with a representative from the company's digital home group about the Expresso Spark, an exercise bicycle equipped with Intel's Viiv platform. The interview took place at the Intel Developer Forum in San Francisco.
