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Intel really, really wants mobile to be a core part of its business. The company has poured billions of dollars into becoming a force in tablets, with some success. According to Strategy Analytics ...
Intel has unveiled plans to introduce more than 10 new tablet personal computer models that run on its own chips later this month, as it seeks to expand beyond its PC stronghold into mobile devices.
The performance hasn’t been there to drive full desktop programs, not unless your tablet is as thick as the Microsoft Surface Pro. But Intel might be about to make that both possible and ...
No company sounds more religious about Moore's Law than Intel, whose co-founder made a famous observation about the miniaturization of chip circuitry 50 years ago. But that doesn't mean the ...
And Intel's long struggle to get into mobile devices is well-known. But better Ultrabooks and tablets are indeed coming. That was the key message out of the Intel Developer Forum in Beijing this ...
Intel on Tuesday announced a reference design for a new 7-inch education tablet, which will rekindle the chip maker’s rivalry with nonprofit organization One Laptop Per Child in the area of ...
A bit of time on Intel's tablet website reveals a shocking marketing blunder. With Samsung apparently set on using chips from either Qualcomm or internally (both of these have strategic merit), it ...
Surprisingly, Intel is focused on something a bit bigger than smartphones and tablets. Intel's CEO Paul Otellini emphasized Intel's plan for embedded devices, as it is the fastest growing sector ...
The Asus Transformer Prime comes to mind here, for example. Intel's primary tablet opening will be with Windows 8 later this year, and its resentment of the iPad has obvious reasons. Considering ...
Intel’s rise and fall in tablets are starting to resemble the company’s misadventures in netbooks less than a decade ago. The company is quickly distancing itself from basic tablets ...
Intel has an ambitious goal for 2014: get its Atom chips into 40 million tablets, or four times the number of tablets that had Intel inside in 2013. But rather than do it by tailoring its products ...