Otellini's eye on multicore computing and WiMax Video
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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.
VW, Intel and your wireless future
Intel CEO Paul Otellini introduces colleague Anand Chandrasekher, vice president of low-power platforms, at the Intel Developer Forum, Sept. 26, in San Francisco. The two chipmaker execs look at a new tablet and how it communicates with a Wi-Fi-equipped car.
RR02: The mobile computing roadmap
This week: What Intel is doing to keep the momentum in computing moving from the desktop to mobile platform. A look at Atom, WiMax, netbooks, and what to expect from the Intel Developers' Forum next week in San Francisco. Guests: senior editor Dan Ackerman, and writer Brooke Crothers.
Apple takes a bow at Intel forum
Phil Schiller, Apple's senior vice president of marketing, shares the stage at IDF, Sept. 26, 2006, with Intel CEO Paul Otellini. At the\r\nSan Francisco event, Schiller said new Apple products were better because of Intel's dual-core chips.
At Oracle OpenWorld in San Francisco, Intel CEO Paul Otellini talks about how new collaborative social-networking tools will fuel the next wave of information technology inside the enterprise.
At Oracle OpenWorld in San Francisco, Intel CEO Paul Otellini talks about keeping pace with Moore's Law by developing processor technologies that minimize power usage and allow chips to be made smaller.
In an interview at Silicon Valley's Churchill Club, Paul Otellini calls WiMax "disruptive technology." The chipmaker chief tells NPR's Moira Gunn where he thinks the wireless standard can lead communications.
Riding the wave of mobile WiMax
During this year's Intel Developer Forum, Intel's Executive Vice President Sean Maloney was joined on stage by Craig Raymond, technical marketing manager. Raymond arrived on a scooter--equipped with a notebook PC and Intel's first WiMax PC Card--to showcase the ease of having fully functional Internet access on the road.
Paul Otellini, chief executive of Intel, takes the stage during a Hewlett-Packard Webcast to discuss the newest Itanium chipset, set to be released midyear.
In conversation with NPR's Moira Gunn at a Churchill Club event, Paul Otellini describes how a focus on markets, rather than products, better positions Intel to deliver what people want. He also discusses how the chipmaker's engineers are adjusting to a recent company reorganization.
