• Intel Proposes 80 Core... For Your Laptop
    Intel Proposes 80 Core... For Your Laptop
    04:37 | Jason Lopez | Feb 12th, 2007 |

    Intel says it has developed an 80-core microprocessor chip that could enable PCs and chip-enabled devices to perform Teraflop level computing. The company will offer more details of its research in a series of scientific papers at the annual Integrated Solid State Circuits Conference this week in San Francisco. ...

  • Testing out Intel's new 45 nanometer processors
    Testing out Intel's new 45 nanometer processors
    07:24 | Robert Scoble | Jan 26th, 2007 |

    Kelin Kuhn is the 45 nanometer device group manager. She runs one of Intel’s most important test labs where Intel figures out what needs improvement. Intel’s profitability rests on her shoulders because if a fab isn’t yielding enough good chips per wafer, Intel will make a lot less money. ...

  • Intel says goodbye to Silicon Dioxide in new 45 nanometer fab
    Intel says goodbye to Silicon Dioxide in new 45 nanometer fab
    40:21 | Robert Scoble | Jan 26th, 2007 |

    Moore’s Law is very much alive, according to Intel Senior Fellow, Mark Bohr. He gave me a tour of Intel’s newest 45 nanometer fab. This is a very rare look inside Intel’s newest fab that’ll make processors you’ll be buying in computers later this year. In this tour you’ll ...

  • Intel's 45 Nanometer Process: 300 Transistors on a Red Blood Cell
    Intel's 45 Nanometer Process: 300 Transistors on a Red Blood Cell
    04:19 | Jason Lopez | Jan 17th, 2007 |

    You might think Moore’s Law comes with an ancillary set of steps on how to adhere to it. The Law essentially says that technology develops so swiftly that chip engineers can pack twice as many transistors on a piece of silicon every two years. Performance jumps dramatically but the business ...

  • Intel's 45nm Technology with Mark Bohr, Scientist and Senior Fellow
    Intel's 45nm Technology with Mark Bohr, Scientist and Senior Fellow
    08:21 | John Furrier | Jan 25th, 2006 |

    In this PodTech. net exclusive interview, Intel scientists say they’ve completed a big step toward manufacturing the smallest and fastest chips yet. Researchers have built a working Static Random Access Memory chip using 45-nanometer process technology.

    The breakthrough is expected to lead to better PCs and laptops, but it will ...

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