Intel acquires ZiiLabs from Creative Technology for $50 million

DNP Intel gets cozy with Ziilabs for $50m

Intel has signed a $50 million deal with Creative Technology to acquire ZiiLabs, a UK-based subsidiary responsible for Android-optimized chip designs like the ZMS-40 and the ZMS-20. Of that $50 million, $30m will be for asset sales and engineering resources while the remainder will be for patent licensing in regards to ZiiLabs GPU technology, which might indicate a move away from PowerVR. We’re not sure if this means Creative will soldier on with OEM-focused devices like the HanZPad, but at least now it’ll have more money in the bank to explore alternative endeavors.

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Source: The Inquirer, CNET Asia

Intel roadmap leak outlines Bay Trail-based Atom for tablets in detail: 3D cameras, half the energy draw

Intel roadmap leak outlines Bay Trailbased Atom for tablets in detail 3D cameras, half the energy draw

Intel isn’t having much success keeping its upcoming Bay Trail-era Atom platform under wraps. If the previous overview leak wasn’t enough, a roadmap uncovered by Mobile Geeks has just explored the finer points of the tablet-oriented Bay View-T and its Valleyview-T processors. The most surprising leap may be in graphics: while we knew the GPU core would be much faster, we’re now seeing that the new Intel hardware can output to as much as a 2,560 x 1,600 display and record stereoscopic, 1080p 3D video in the event that 3D-capable tablets come back into vogue. Likewise, battery life should be rosier than you’d expect; Bay Trail-T can reach the same performance at half the power, which should lead to about two extra hours of video playback for at least some of the 1.6GHz to 2.1GHz processors in the lineup. Don’t get too excited by the potential, however. If the leak is accurate, Bay Trail for tablets isn’t expected until early 2014, by which point 22-nanometer Atoms will be a step behind the cutting edge.

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Via: Notebook Italia (translated)

Source: Mobile Geeks

Intel CEO To Retire in May 2013

intel-ceo-paul-otelliniPaul Otellini, the current CEO of Intel, has announced his retirement, effective at the end of the annual stockholder’s meeting in May 2013. This will conclude his 40-year career at Intel (years as CEO), a company which is 45-years old. During his tenure, stockholder dividends were raised by 181% and company generated $107B in cash. As a final contribution, he will help Intel find his replacement. (more…)

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Intel’s Ultrabook Design Induces Growth In Premium Laptop Market, Intel Shows 50 Cores Chip, wows to break Exaflop barrier,

Intel CEO Paul Otellini retires in May 2013

Intel‘s CEO Paul Otellini will retire in May, the chip company has confirmed, though no replacement has yet been found. Otellini – who joined Intel nearly forty years ago, and has been its CEO for the past eight years – will transition out of his role over a six month period, having been the primary motivator behind Intel’s strategy in ultrabooks, though has also seen the company struggle to compete in mobile processors.

Although Intel is still dominant in desktop and laptop CPU sales, the company has been largely absent in tablets and smartphones. There, despite its tardy efforts with Atom, the company has seen ARM-based chips from rivals such as Qualcomm, NVIDIA, and Samsung all grab market share.

“After almost four decades with the company and eight years as CEO, it’s time to move on and transfer Intel’s helm to a new generation of leadership” Otellini said in a statement today. “I look forward to working with Andy, the board and the management team during the six-month transition period, and to being available as an advisor to management after retiring as CEO.”

Intel’s board will “consider internal and external candidates” for the role of CEO, it has said today. Meanwhile, there has been some shuffling in the executive team, with software business chief Renee James, COO and head of worldwide manufacturing Brian Krzanich, and CFO and director of corporate strategy Stacy Smith all promoted to executive vice president.


Intel CEO Paul Otellini retires in May 2013 is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Intel CEO Paul Otellini Will Retire This May After 40 Year Tenure

At this point, there aren’t that many people who’ve worked at Intel as long as CEO Paul Otellini has. But after 40 years at the 45-year old chip maker—the last eight of them as CEO—he’s hanging up his stirrups this May. His timing couldn’t be better. More »

Intel CEO Paul Otellini to step down in May, leaves a legacy of x86 dominance

Intel CEO Paul Otellini to step down in May, leaves a legacy of x86 dominance

Intel has just announced that CEO Paul Otellini will be stepping down in May of 2013. The long time executive will be retiring from the company and industry that he has dedicated the last 40 years of his life to, leaving behind a legacy that has seen Intel’s dominance in the x86 field grow to almost unapproachable levels. As the fifth chief executive in the company’s history he’s overseen not only the processor reboot that followed the inefficient Pentium 4, but also played a role in Apple’s famous transition from PowerPC to Intel. Otellini and the board of directors will work together over the next six months to ensure a seamless transition of power; however, a successor has yet to be chosen.

The change at the top comes at a time when Intel is facing renewed competition, but from an unexpected source. The rise of smartphones and tablets has seen the ARM architecture and its numerous licensees surge in both mindshare and marketshare. Intel is only now getting into that realm with its ultra low-power Medfield line of x86 chips. Whoever takes over as CEO in May will be facing a landscape that poses serious challenges to the company’s CPU dominance.

For Otellini’s complete statement, check out the PR after the break.

Continue reading Intel CEO Paul Otellini to step down in May, leaves a legacy of x86 dominance

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Intel CEO Paul Otellini to step down in May, leaves a legacy of x86 dominance originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 19 Nov 2012 09:11:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Leaked Intel Atom roadmap unveils next gen tablet processor

It’s not uncommon at all for us to learn about the future processors that are coming from Intel via leaked roadmap images from press or analyst events. The latest roadmap image leaked outlines Intel’s next-generation Atom processors aimed at the tablet market. The new processor is the Intel Bay Trail-T.

The roadmap shows that the Bay Trail-T processor will be on the market by 2014. The slide also shows that the new processor will be combined with the 22-nm SoC code-named Valley View-T. Reports indicate that while we are over a year away from the official launch of this next-generation tablet platform, Intel is already in talks with OEM partners to develop using the platform.

Some of the fruits from these partner talks are expected to be announced at CES 2013. The new platform seems to be significantly improved from the current Intel Clover Trail platform. Bay Trail-T is manufactured using a 22-nm process that reduces power consumption and increase performance. The current Clover Trailplatform uses a 32-nm process and the segment leading ARM Cortex-A15 uses a 28-nm process.

Intel says that the new platform will have a 50 to 60% performance improvement compared to Clover Trial. Intel also says that it will use half the power while offering the same performance. The platform will have quad cores operating at 2.1 GHz and support DX 11 graphics. The platform will support tablet resolutions up to 2560 x 1600. Bay Trail also has the option of including 3-D cameras capable of shooting 1080p resolution at 60 FPS.

[via


Leaked Intel Atom roadmap unveils next gen tablet processor is written by Shane McGlaun & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Motorola’s RAZR i MT788 announced with 2GHz Intel chip, heading to China Mobile next month

Motorola

Motorola created quite some buzz with its first “Intel inside” Android phone, the RAZR i, back in September, so it’s only natural to see the company tapping into the Chinese market with a localized variant. Dubbed the RAZR i MT788, this China Mobile device bears much similarity to its Western sibling on paper: 2GHz Intel Atom Z2480, 4.3-inch 960 x 540 AMOLED display (with Gorilla Glass), eight-megapixel camera, microSD expansion (up to 32GB) and Android Ice Cream Sandwich.

The difference? Well, the chassis is the most obvious one: instead of using the same design as the original RAZR i, the new MT788 looks identical to the MSM8625-powered dual-SIM XT788 on China Telecom. On top of that, the battery is rated at just 1,735mAh instead of the RAZR i’s 2,000mAh, and there’s just 4GB of built-in memory instead 16GB; but the front-facing camera’s bumped up from 0.3 megapixels to 1.3. There’s no price just yet, but interested buyers can pick one up in China starting in mid-December. Will the world’s largest carrier help Intel take a significant bite out of the mobile phone market? Only time will tell.

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Motorola’s RAZR i MT788 announced with 2GHz Intel chip, heading to China Mobile next month originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 19 Nov 2012 06:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Titan supercomputer leads latest Top 500 list, newly-available Xeon Phi chip cracks top ten

The supercomputer formerly known as Jaguar recently got an upgrade that was significant enough to earn it a new moniker, and it turns out that was also enough for it to claim the top stop on the latest Top 500 list of the world’s most powerful supercomputers. Now known as Titan, the Cray-developed supercomputer at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory edged out the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory’s Sequoia supercomputer for the number one position, reaching 17.59 Petaflops per second with the aid of 18,688 NVIDIA K20 GPUs and an equal number of AMD Opteron processors. As EE Times notes, however, the other big story with this list is the strong showing for Intel’s new Xeon Phi co-processors, which have just starting shipping to customers and have already found their way into seven of the supercomputers on the list, including one in the top ten (the Stampede at the Texas Advanced Computing Center at the University of Texas). You can see how your favorite supercomputer did at the link below.

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Titan supercomputer leads latest Top 500 list, newly-available Xeon Phi chip cracks top ten originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 12 Nov 2012 19:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Intel’s NUC mini-PC internals exposed, available for around $300 in early December

Intel's NUC miniPC internals exposed, available for $300320 in early December

Intel’s Next Unit of Computing (NUC) is just about ready for store shelves, and Anandtech managed to get their hands on the DC3217BY model to provide us an early inside look at the mini-PC. Clearly aimed at enthusiasts, the motherboard and 4 x 4-inch chassis are all you get out of the box; you’ll have to get the memory, the mini PCIe cards and even the power cord separately. Luckily installation looks quite easy — only four screws hold the chassis and motherboard together. The bottom mini PCIe slot accommodates half height cards (for WiFi, presumably) and you can go ahead and put an mSATA drive or full height card at the top.

As we saw in our IDF hands-on, the NUC holds a Core i3 CPU, HD 4000 graphics, two SoDIMM sockets, mSATA and mini-PCIe interfaces, one to two HDMI and three USB 2.0 connectors. The DC3217BY eschews Gigabit Ethernet (which is available on the DC3217IYE) in favor of a Thunderbolt port. While we initially thought the NUC would go for somewhere around $400, it turns out it’ll cost $300 to $320 and will be available from Amazon and Eggdrop in early December. If you’re considering getting one for yourself, we recommend taking a peek at the source to get a more intimate look.

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Intel’s NUC mini-PC internals exposed, available for around $300 in early December originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 10 Nov 2012 04:17:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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