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InternetNews September 18, 2006 David Needle |
Intel Sees The Laser Light Intel announced its latest research designed to create a super-fast hybrid silicon processor capable of moving data at terabits-per-second speed. |
PC Magazine October 11, 2006 |
Bits & Bites v25n19 Intel and researchers have developed a silicon chip that can produce laser beams. |
Scientific American August 2005 Steven Ashley |
Making Light of Silicon Scientists at UCLA and Intel have obtained coherent photons of light from silicon. This low cost alternative to "exotic" semiconductor materials currently used as lasers will pave the way for many technological advances. |
InternetNews February 17, 2005 Michael Singer |
Intel Beams Up Silicon The ability to build a laser from standard silicon could lead to inexpensive optical devices that move data inside and between computers. |
The Motley Fool October 11, 2005 Dan Bloom |
Intel's Optical Breakthrough The chipmaker may open new tech frontiers by teaching silicon and light to cooperate. |
The Motley Fool September 19, 2006 Jack Uldrich |
Intel's New Laser-Like Focus The company's latest silicon chip development could open up exciting new markets. The news offers investors yet another reason to believe Intel remains a sound long-term investment. |
Technology Research News March 9, 2005 |
Silicon Chip Laser Goes Continuous Useful lasers made from silicon would make it possible to move data between and within computer chips using light rather than electricity. This would make for faster chips that could be more tightly integrated with optical communications equipment. |
IEEE Spectrum October 2005 Paniccia & Koehl |
The Silicon Solution In the future, ordinary silicon chips will move data using light rather than electrons, unleashing nearly limitless bandwidth and revolutionizing computing |
Technology Research News February 9, 2005 |
All-silicon chip laser demoed Researchers from Intel have moved a step forward in the push to meld lasers and silicon chips, which could eventually be used in portable biological and chemical sensors, to amplify communications signals, and to convert light to different wavelengths. |
IEEE Spectrum October 2005 Salvatore Coffa |
Light From Silicon For decades, silicon was a semiconducting dim bulb, but now we can make it into LEDs that match the best made from more exotic materials |
PC Magazine October 11, 2006 |
The Apple Living Room In conjunction with its overhaul of the iPod line and the iTunes online store, Apple Computer is getting into the set-top box business. |
PC Magazine August 30, 2006 John C. Dvorak |
Inside Track v25n16 There needs to be something besides high-end games that can suck up all the power of Intel's dual-core chips. This desperation will only get worse when Intel rolls out the four-core chip. |
Technology Research News December 1, 2004 Eric Smalley |
Pure Silicon Laser Debuts Researchers have made a prototype laser from silicon. The laser is tunable, meaning it can lase in a range of wavelengths, or colors, and it works at room temperature. |
InternetNews February 13, 2004 Michael Singer |
Intel Joins Fiber Optics, Silicon The chipmaker looks to push high-bandwidth connections beyond the 10GHz barrier; companies that make copper interconnect or optoelectronics take note. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics April 2005 |
Optoelectronics Briefs Breakthrough in solid-state laser technology... Fiber-optic field-simulation test instrument... TTL modulation added to photon devices... New high-power optical fiber... Light-sensitive camera... High-power multimode diode bar... Laser Diode earns ISO 9001:2000 certification... |
Fast Company March 2002 George Anders |
How Intel Puts Innovation Inside Everybody worships at the altar of innovation. But it takes a company such as Intel to distill the very essence of innovation and turn it into a set of learnable, repeatable practices... |
IEEE Spectrum March 2013 Joachim N. Burghartz |
Make Way for Flexible Silicon Chips We need them because thin, pliable organic semiconductors are too slow to serve in tomorrow's chips. Seamless integration of computing into everyday objects isn't quite here yet. |
InternetNews August 22, 2005 Paul Shread |
Intel, RIM Rise on Rumors Reports of a joint development deal between Intel and Research In Motion boosted shares of both stocks on Monday...Chip stocks rose after a positive industry report... The market was constrained due to oil prices, but all indexes increased slightly... etc. |
PC World September 12, 2002 James Niccolai |
Tomorrow's CPU: Wireless Link Inside Intel finds new ways to shrink, speed chips, plus build in radio functions. |
The Motley Fool January 15, 2010 Anders Bylund |
You Need Chip Stocks Today Get your chip stocks while they're hot! |
IEEE Spectrum January 2009 Jean Kumagai |
Winner: Quantum Leap Quantum-dot lasers from Japan's QD Laser will make high-speed "fiber to the home" networks simpler, cheaper, and more power-efficient |
The Motley Fool January 29, 2007 Jack Uldrich |
IBM and Intel Install a New Gatekeeper Changes to transistor components will keep Moore's Law running smoothly. Which companies stand to come out on top? Investors, take note. |
InternetNews March 3, 2008 |
Intel Picks 'Atom' as Name For New Chip Intel's latest microprocessor will power a new family of PCs and mobile devices. |
IEEE Spectrum October 2006 Brian R. Santo |
Acronym Addiction When you live on the cutting edge of technology, there are, literally, no words to describe it. Instead we have acronyms. Lots and lots of acronyms. ABT... BEOL... CSP... etc. |
The Motley Fool November 4, 2010 Anders Bylund |
Say Hello to Intel, the Foundry Service! Its clientele is extremely exclusive. |
BusinessWeek July 31, 2006 Cliff Edwards |
Intel Sharpens Its Offensive Game After another rough quarter, Intel is rolling out new chips to counter arch-rival AMD |
The Motley Fool August 30, 2004 Rich Duprey |
Profiting From Moore's Law Intel develops a new chip that roughly doubles the number of transistors on a chip. Whether it's in the chip makers themselves, or in the picks and shovels of the industry, investors stand to make big profits from tiny chips. |
IEEE Spectrum January 2006 |
You Tell Us... Continued Silicon Photonics... A Desktop Supercomputer... |
PC Magazine March 6, 2007 Loyd Case |
Intel's Next-Generation Core2 Microprocessor Why Intel's new Penryn processor could be a major breakthrough for computing. |
IEEE Spectrum September 2008 Peide D. Ye |
Beyond Silicon's Elemental Logic In the quest for speed, key parts of micro-processors may soon be made of gallium arsenide or other III-V semiconductors |
BusinessWeek August 16, 2004 Cliff Edwards.. |
"This Is Not The Intel We All Know" The giant has fallen behind in chips for multimedia -- and investors aren't happy. Why is Intel overpromising and underdelivering? What can Intel do to solve the problems? |
InternetNews April 6, 2004 Michael Singer |
Intel's Might Pushes Packets in the Wind The No. 1 chipmaker's sphere of influence over wireless LAN technology and radio silicon reaches well beyond the laboratory. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics May 2007 |
Silicon Wafer Shipments Experience Growth for the Fifth Consecutive Year Worldwide silicon wafer area shipments increased by 20 percent in 2006 when compared to 2005 area shipments according to the SEMI Silicon Manufacturers Group (SMG). |
InternetNews July 25, 2005 David Needle |
Intel's Arizona Plans Are FABulous Intel is sinking $3 billion into a new chip manufacturing plant, focused on the company's most cutting edge 45 nanometer process technology for future computing platforms. The new technology lowers the cost of chip production. |
The Motley Fool February 12, 2004 Seth Jayson |
Intel Sees the Light Company researchers reach a breakthrough in optical computing. |
Wired August 2001 Josh McHugh |
Beam On Want your own private fiber node? Has Novalux got an extended-cavity surface-emitting laser for you! |
InternetNews August 17, 2010 |
Intel's TI Unit Buy Looks to Edge Out ARM Acquisition of Texas Instruments' cable unit gives Intel new clout in its push to seize the consumer electronics device market from smaller player ARM. |
The Motley Fool October 18, 2004 Rich Duprey |
Intel on the Outs? The industry giant announces still another miscue as it cancels an anticipated faster chip. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics April 2007 Gurnett & Adams |
Merging the Functionalities of Silicon, and III-Vs: Two Promising Approaches One of the least flexible rules in electronic design is the need to keep silicon devices, and compound semiconductor devices separate. Two new developments are now threatening to make this rule partly or entirely obsolete. |
IEEE Spectrum January 2007 Samuel K. Moore |
Masters of Memory Swiss firm Innovative Silicon crams 5 megabytes of RAM into the space of one. Their chip is called called Z-RAM, and if it grabs even a little piece of the on-chip memory market, it will change the ground rules for microprocessor design and will quickly become a company to be reckoned with. |
BusinessWeek June 11, 2009 Cliff Edwards |
Intel Pushes Its Own Stimulus Plan Chip giant Intel continues its strategy of innovating during a downturn, with a $7 billion investment in upgrading factories in the U.S. |
The Motley Fool August 18, 2004 Ben McClure |
Intel: Gremlins Inside? There's been yet another product delay at Intel. The company's share price, well down from its high, is probably where it belongs. |
Technology Research News January 12, 2005 |
Silicon Surfaces Speed Circuits Researchers have devised a way to use the chemistry of silicon surfaces to make smaller chip features. |
The Motley Fool January 26, 2007 Dan Bloom |
Silicon Labs' New Chip Silicon Labs has introduced a product that will make it easier for any device manufacturer to add AM/FM radio listening functionality to small handheld devices. Investors, take note. |
PC Magazine April 1, 2009 John C. Dvorak |
Chip Biz Buzzwords It's no surprise that everyone in the Valley is so comfortable with insider and exclusionary code words, many of which make no sense. |
IEEE Spectrum February 2006 Holonyak & Feng |
The Transistor Laser Ultrafast transistors that output optical and electrical signals open a new computing frontier. |
The Motley Fool September 7, 2005 Jennifer Schonberger |
Energy Sails: Chips Ahoy! Goodies in store for Intel's shareholders as chip architecture is revamped. |
BusinessWeek September 23, 2010 Oliver Staley |
Innovator: Walt de Herr Smaller, power-hungry processors push the limits of silicon. Physicist Walt de Heer thinks nanotechnology can provide a solution. |
The Motley Fool August 2, 2010 Manikandan Raman |
Intel Chips Could Land in iPad, iPhone Intel wants to get in on a piece of the smartphone market. |
The Motley Fool January 27, 2006 Jack Uldrich |
Intel: Smaller Is Better A new 45-nanometer chip could give Intel a big technical advantage. The news won't immediately stem Intel's market-share losses or ignite a rally in its stock price, but it will certainly keep the heat on AMD. |