Intel, Qualcomm and Elon Musk
Qualcomm launched its first Arm-based PC CPUs last year, and although they haven't exactly been a smash hit, partly because of compatibility problems, Arm-based PC are likely to be here to stay. Qualcomm is now seemingly looking to re-enter the server CPU market with new chips.
Sailesh Kottapalli, formerly an Intel Fellow and lead architect for Intel’s Xeon line of data center chips, announced this week that he recently joined Qualcomm as a senior vice president. Kottapalli’s title at Intel indicates he was a top engineer there,
Intel Corp. (NASDAQ: INTC) is still a target of takeover speculation even though no official deal has been revealed since recent allegations of a “mystery buyer” prompted a roughly 10% stock surge. Though Intel’s continuous challenges and competition from Advanced Micro Devices Inc.
Major advancements in power efficiency mean laptops now last longer than ever, and you should take advantage of that.
Elon [look at me] Musk, Global Foundries, and Qualcomm are in Florida, where they will are rumoured to be plotting to buy Intel. According to Semi Accurate, representatives of the three met at the ...
Sailesh Kottapalli, a 28-year Intel veteran and a senior fellow and chief architect for the company’s Xeon processors, made the announcement on LinkedIn on January 13, stating that he joined Qualcomm as a senior vice president.
Former Intel Xeon chief architect Sailesh Kottapalli said he has joined Qualcomm as the chip designer builds out a team to enter the data center CPU market.
Microsoft may be getting ready to launch smaller Qualcomm-powered versions of its most popular Surface devices, the Surface Pro and Surface Laptop.
Qualcomm is now seemingly looking to re-enter the server CPU market with new chips. According to a LinkedIn post, Intel veteran and a chief architect of the Xeon server processor family Sailesh ...
Baya Systems, a chip technology company that wants accelerate intelligent computing, raised $36 million in funding.
A look at some of the more notable enterprise notebooks from CES 2025, and why I expect AI PCs to go mainstream this year.