More chips in your future
Intel sees big sales ahead as mobile technology becomes the norm. Also: Coming to terms with RFID.
roundup Intel sees bumper sales ahead as mobile technology becomes the norm. Also: Coming to terms with RFID.
December 13, 2005
December 13, 2005
December 13, 2005
December 13, 2005
The New York Times
December 12, 2005
December 11, 2005
December 9, 2005
December 7, 2005
Intel's sales chief eyes future
video Vice president and general manager of Intel's Mobile Platforms Group talks about chip needs for home video and mobile phones.December 13, 2005
Gartner: RFID is $3 billion business by 2010
Spending on radio tags for merchandise should get a big boost from the fight against fake pharmaceuticals, researcher saysDecember 13, 2005
RFID goes to college
Indiana University, University of California at Irvine add business courses in electronic-identification technology.December 13, 2005
Taking on rootkits with hardware
newsmaker Travis Schluessler, an Intel security architect, explains how the chipmaker's labs plan to take on sophisticated threats.December 13, 2005
A fierce flash chip battle
In a bid for supremacy, Toshiba and SanDisk spend billions to build factory lines, hire engineers and develop more powerful chips.The New York Times
December 12, 2005
Upstart aims to bring HD camcorders to the masses
Thinking of buying an HD camcorder? Wait. They might cost a heck of a lot less next year.December 11, 2005
previous coverage
Chip sales on upswing
Global semiconductor revenue is predicted to reach $235 billion in 2005, market research firm Gartner said.December 9, 2005
Itanium: A cautionary tale
Itanium serves instead as a tale of how complex, long-term development plans can go wrong in a fast-moving industry.December 7, 2005