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Posts Tagged ‘CEO Paul Otellini’

Intel Names BBC Executive to Lead Digital Home Effort

Santa Clara, Calif., Jan. 18, 2011– Intel Corporation today announced that Erik Huggers will serve as corporate vice president and general manager of the company’s Digital Home Group and become a member of Intel’s Management Committee. Huggers is director of the BBC’s Future Media & Technology division and serves as a member of the BBC’s Executive Board. He replaces interim general manager Brad Daniels.

“Erik Huggers’ proven track record of managing a variety of digital media businesses will be an extraordinary asset to Intel’s digital home initiative,” said Intel President and CEO Paul Otellini. “Erik’s background and vision for delivering new platforms, interactive content and services to consumers are an outstanding fit for Intel, and I am thrilled to welcome such a talented person to drive this key strategic business for Intel.  We look forward to him joining our team.”

Huggers joined the BBC in 2007 and is responsible for delivering BBC content over the Internet, interactive TV and mobile, helping audiences enjoy programming using a wide variety of devices from any location. He is also responsible for managing the BBC’s Broadcast and Enterprise Technology Group and BBC Archives, as well as leading the BBC’s Research and Development activities.

Huggers has long been at the forefront of digital media innovation. Prior to joining the BBC, he was with Microsoft where he led the global business development for Windows Media Technologies. Before joining Microsoft, Huggers worked with Endemol Entertainment as director of business development for its interactive division.

“I look forward to joining one of the leading technology companies in the world,” said Huggers. “This is a tremendous opportunity to build a new business for silicon, software and services to unlock the potential of high-quality connected media experiences in the living room.”
About Intel
Intel (NASDAQ: INTC) is a world leader in computing innovation. The company designs and builds the essential technologies that serve as the foundation for the world’s computing devices. Additional information about Intel is available at newsroom.intel.com and blogs.intel.com.

Intel and the Intel logo are trademarks of Intel Corporation in the United States and other countries.

* Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of others.

.

Microsoft Windows 7 Tablets, Convertibles Dominate Intel CES Booth

LAS VEGAS: One thing that resonated from Intel CEO Paul Otellini’s introduction of the second-generation Sandy Bridge Core processors Jan. 5 was that the chipmaker’s commitment to the Microsoft Windows platform is stronger than ever. The proof could be seen at the Intel booth during the 2011 Consumer Electronics Show here Jan. 6, where a dizzying array of laptops, netbooks, tablet computers and even a tablet-laptop were on display. Manufacturers ranged from the high profile to the low key. All are looking to push Windows 7 into a favorable competitive stance versus Apple’s iPad and Google Android tablets, such as the Samsung Galaxy Tab and the soon-to-arrive Motorola Xoom. During the show, eWEEK took a stroll around the booth and took these pictures of Intel Atom chip-powered tablets, notebooks and convertibles. Our immediate favorite was the Windows 7-based Samsung Sliding PC 7 series, which its calling a convertible tablet-notebook. As with most Samsung hardware, the device was stunning, recalling the sleek design of its existing notebooks. This eWEEK slide show leads with the Samsung device. – …


Intel Sandy Bridge Chips Emphasize Graphics, Gaming: CES

Intel CEO Paul Otellini rolled out the chipmaker’s new Sandy Bridge processors, which he said would account for one-third of the company’s 2011 revenue. – LAS VEGAS Intel CEO
Paul Otellini introduced the chipmaker’s new second-generation Core processor
set at the Consumer Electronics Show here a line of 20 chips that will shore up
a PC and laptop market challenged by the rise of tablets and other mobile
gadgets.
Code-named Sandy Bridge, the new C…


Intel CEO Otellini: Atom-based Smartphones Due in 2011

At a conference in San Francisco, Intel CEO Paul Otellini said that smartphones powered by the upcoming “Medfield” chip should begin hitting the market in the second half of 2011. – Smartphones powered by Intel Atom processors
should start appearing on the market in the second half of 2011,
according to company President and CEO Paul Otellini.
Speaking at the Barclays Capital Global Technology
Conference in San Francisco Dec. 8, Otellini reportedly said the new
smartphones…


Chip Shot: CRN Ranks Otellini among Most Influential Executives

Intel CEO Paul Otellini jumped to the #2 ranking from #9 last year in CRN’s ranking of the “The 25 Most Influential Executives of 2010.”  CRN praised Otellini for keeping Intel relevant in a fast-changing industry and singled out Intel’s planned purchase of McAfee. Solution providers and industry executives nominated the executives for channel influence, effectiveness and visibility, and business and sales impact.

Chip Shot: Intel Capital America Fund 80% Invested

At the eleventh annual Intel Capital CEO Summit in Huntington Beach, CA, Intel President and CEO Paul Otellini gave an update on Intel Capital’s Invest in America (IIA) Fund, a $200 million commitment to investing in innovation in the U.S. over the next two years.  In less than nine months, Intel Capital has invested nearly 80% of the committed dollars in 56 companies around the country. These investments, totaling $156 million, are in exciting new areas from cloud computing and cleantech to educational gaming and smartphones. Intel, along with 24 fellow Venture Capitalists,  is committed to the nation’s global competitiveness and investing in industries that will produce the next high tech jobs in the U.S.

Intel Announces Multi-Billion-Dollar Investment in Next-Generation Manufacturing in U.S.

NEWS HIGHLIGHTS

  • Intel will spend $6-8 billion in manufacturing to support future technology advancements in Arizona and Oregon.
  • The investment supports the creation of 6,000-8,000 construction jobs and 800-1,000 permanent high-tech jobs, and also allows Intel to maintain its current manufacturing employment base at these U.S. sites.
  • The investment will fund a new development fab in Oregon, as well as upgrades to four existing fabs to manufacture the next-generation 22-nanometer (nm) process technology.
  • Intel’s next-generation, 22nm microprocessors will enable sleeker device designs, higher performance and longer battery life at lower costs.

 

 

SANTA CLARA, Calif., Oct. 19, 2010 – Intel Corporation announced today that the company will invest between $6 billion and $8 billion on future generations of manufacturing technology in its American facilities. The action will fund deployment of Intel’s next-generation 22- nanometer (nm) manufacturing process across several existing U.S. factories, along with construction of a new development fabrication plant (commonly called a “fab”) in Oregon. The projects will support 6,000 to 8,000 construction jobs and result in 800 to 1,000 new permanent high-tech jobs.

 

“Today’s announcement reflects the next tranche of the continued advancement of Moore’s Law and a further commitment to invest in the future of Intel and America,” said Intel President and CEO Paul Otellini.  “The most immediate impact of our multi-billion-dollar investment will be the thousands of jobs associated with building a new fab and upgrading four others, and the high-wage, high-tech manufacturing jobs that follow.”

 

The PC industry is achieving a significant milestone this year with 1 million PCs shipping per day. The upgraded fabs create the capacity for the continued growth of the PC market segment and additional computing markets Intel is addressing, such as mobile and embedded computing.

 

The new investments reinforce Intel’s leadership in the most advanced semiconductor manufacturing in the world. Intel’s brand-new development fab in Oregon – to be called “D1X” – is scheduled for R&D startup in 2013. Upgrades are also planned for a total of four existing factories in Arizona (known as Fab 12 and Fab 32) and Oregon (known as D1C and D1D).

 

“Intel makes approximately 10 billion transistors per second. Our factories produce the most advanced computer technology in the world and these investments will create capacity for innovation we haven’t yet imagined,” said Brian Krzanich, senior vice president and general manager of Intel’s Manufacturing and Supply Chain. “Intel and the world of technology lie at the heart of this future. Contrary to conventional wisdom, we can retain a vibrant manufacturing economy here in the United States by focusing on the industries of the future.”

 

While Intel generates approximately three-fourths of its revenues overseas, it maintains three-fourths of its microprocessor manufacturing in the United States. This new investment commitment also allows the company to maintain its existing manufacturing employment base at these sites.

 

This new capital expenditure follows a U.S. investment announcement made in February 2009 to support state-of-the-art upgrades to its manufacturing process. Those upgrades resulted in 32nm process technology which has already produced computer chips being used today in PCs, servers, embedded and mobile devices around the world. Intel’s first 22nm microprocessors, codenamed “Ivy Bridge,” will be in production in late 2011 and will boost further levels of performance and power efficiency. By continuing to advance manufacturing process technology, additional features and functions can be integrated and enable devices with sleeker designs, higher performance and longer battery life at lower costs for users.

 

View the Multimedia Press Kit
(includes the full story with high resolution photos, videos, quotes, fact sheets, and more)

 

 

 

About Intel
Intel (NASDAQ: INTC) is a world leader in computing innovation. The company designs and builds the essential technologies that serve as the foundation for the world’s computing devices. Additional information about Intel is available at newsroom.intel.com and blogs.intel.com.

 

Intel, the Intel logo, Atom and Core are trademarks of Intel Corporation in the United States and other countries.

 

* Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of others.

Chip Shot: Otellini At Council of Foreign Relations

Intel Corporation CEO Paul Otellini was the featured speaker today at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York City. The event was part of the Council’s CEO Speaker Series and was a discussion moderated by Ken Auletta, best-selling author and columnist for the New Yorker.  The state of innovation today, how it is driving shifts in traditional markets and industries, and the resulting implications and opportunities for business and government leaders were among the topics covered. Read Paul Otellini’s speech transcript.

Intel Atom-Based Tablets with MeeGo, Android on Display at 2010 IDF

To Intel CEO Paul Otellini, tablet PCs are a fast-growing part of the industry that will continue to be what he calls an "additive" form factor, a device that people will use for a number of functions but that won’t necessarily replace their need for a more robust notebook. However, there’s no doubt about the impact Apple’s iPad has had on rejuvenating the tablet, a form factor that has been around for more than a decade. ABI Research estimates that tablet sales could hit 11 million this year, while In-Stat believes it could grow to 58 million by 2014. A slew of systems and device makers, from HP to RIM, are lining up to roll out their own tablets, joining the likes of Dell, which already has the Streak on the market. Even Cisco has jumped in with its Android-powered Cius business tablet. And as Intel officials made clear during their Intel Developers Forum event in San Francisco, they expect to be a significant player, both with their Atom processor platform and their MeeGo operating system. At IDF, Dell officials showed off the Inspiron Duo, their configurable mobile device that can be used both as a tablet and a netbook, and a host of other tablets were put on display as well. Here is a look at some of the Android-powered tablets that cropped up at the show. – …


Intel CEO Otellini Talks ‘Sandy Bridge,’ Expanded Industry Reach

Intel CEO Paul Otellini said the upcoming “Sandy Bridge” Core architecture will begin shipping in products in early 2011. – SAN FRANCISCO Intel
CEO Paul Otellini is continuing his push to
create a continuum of computing based on Intel Architecture, and said the
company’s upcoming quot;Sandy Chip quot; processor is another step in that
direction.
In his opening keynote here at the Intel Developer Forum Sept.
13, Ot…


Intel Innovating to Deliver Seamless Experiences Across Smart, Connected Devices

NEWS HIGHLIGHTS

  • Otellini described how the spread of smarter, Internet-connected devices presents engineering challenges and opportunities for the industry.
  • Intel is extending its chip design, manufacturing techniques and software expertise to offer more complete hardware and software platforms and related services for new market segments.
  • Innovative technologies and concepts demonstrate Intel’s leading computing architecture delivering a consistent, interoperable Internet experience across a range of devices.
  • Smart TV-enabling products to become available this Fall from D-Link*, Google*, Logitech*, Sony* and Telecom Italia*.

 

 

SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 13, 2010 – Intel Corporation’s CEO Paul Otellini today highlighted several trends and technologies that have created a “new marketplace for pervasive computing” that poses engineering challenges that are also opportunities for the high-tech industry.

These trends include the proliferation of billions of smarter, Internet-connected devices that include PCs, phones and cars; and how individuals want to seamlessly move between devices to connect with friends, get information and be entertained. Otellini said people “will choose the device that provides the best experience for any given intended use and that no one device will win.”

 

Intel is positioning itself to advance – and benefit from – this transformation in the computing marketplace. The company is extending its chip design, manufacturing techniques and software expertise to offer more complete hardware and software platforms and related services that deliver energy-efficient performance, security and Internet connectivity across a large, dynamic range of devices. The company is developing products that span high performance PCs and servers to a broad range of other “smart” devices that currently or soon will connect to the Internet.

 

“Computing has become an indispensible part of our daily lives,” Otellini said in a tone-setting speech to open the company’s semi-annual Intel Developer Forum. “Our vision is to create a continuum of personal computing experiences that provides consistency and interoperability across all Internet-connected devices in the home, car, office or in your pocket.

 

“At the heart of this continuum will sit Intel technology that will make devices smarter, more powerful and more useful,” he added. “We’re changing how we develop and deliver solutions so we can deliver on this vision.”

 

Intel has made limited investments beyond the PC in recent years. However, it has made nearly $10 billion in acquisitions over the last year – starting with Wind River – to help the company extend its capabilities. Otellini said Intel’s recently announced, planned acquisitions of Infineon’s* Wireless Solutions Business and McAfee Inc.* will enhance the company’s ability to deliver products that offer a choice of wireless connections, and more effectively counter the increasingly sophisticated security attacks happening on a broad range of Internet-connected devices. The planned purchase of Texas Instruments’* cable modem business will add to Intel’s ability to deliver Internet services to consumer electronics devices.

Intel’s CEO also described how the benefits of Moore’s Law and Intel’s leading-edge transistor technology are being applied to different computing segments for increasingly capable and energy-efficient processors. The company’s unique High-k metal gate transistor technology enables 10 times less power leakage from generation to generation while continuing to improve performance.

 

“There’s tremendous innovation happening for PCs today,” Otellini said, citing several examples including the upcoming 2nd Generation Intel® Core™ processor family, Intel® Wireless Display technology, and manageability technology for business PCs. “I’m excited about Intel’s prospects for bringing its rich history of computing expertise to other markets.”

 

The Intel® Core™ processor, Intel® Atom™ processor and Intel software tools are playing a role transforming data centers, the Internet “cloud” and other areas that are being transformed by the proliferation of smarter, Internet-connected devices. Otellini highlighted Intel’s progress in these areas. He also demonstrated several technologies that showed Intel’s leading computing architecture delivering a consistent and interoperable Internet experience across multiple devices.

 

“We’re excited by how the TV industry is making a transition from having just a few Internet-based services to a truly integrated Internet experience,” Otellini said. “We call this new category smart TV, and products are beginning to take off around the world.”

 

Otellini showed two smart TV-enabling products powered by the Intel® Atom™ processor CE4100 and Google* TV that will come out this Fall. The Sony Internet TV and the Logitech Revue* add-in box seamlessly combine access to the Internet with the TV viewing experience through the combination of Intel processors and the Google TV Android* platform. D-Link*, Telecom Italia* and several other companies are also expected to launch Intel® Atom™ processor CE4100-based devices soon.

 

Intel’s success in the embedded processor area is continuing with design wins for Intel Core and Intel Atom processors in more than 30 market segments that include cars, home energy management and digital signage. There currently are more than 3,800 embedded customer engagements for the Intel® Atom™ processor.

More information about the technologies demonstrated in the speech is available at www.intel.com/newsroom/idf.

 

About Intel
Intel (NASDAQ: INTC) is a world leader in computing innovation. The company designs and builds the essential technologies that serve as the foundation for the world’s computing devices. Additional information about Intel is available at newsroom.intel.com and blogs.intel.com.

 

Intel, the Intel logo, Core and Atom are trademarks of Intel Corporation in the United States and other countries.

 

* Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of others.

Intel ‘Sandy Bridge’ Chip Architecture to Take Center Stage at IDF

At IDF, Intel will feature its chip architecture code-named Sandy Bridge, with enhanced graphics capabilities. PCs with the new chips are due out in early 2011. – Intel’s next-generation quot;Sandy
Bridge quot; processor
microarchitecture will be a key topic of discussion at the Intel Developer
Forum, which kicks off Sept. 13 in San Francisco.
CEO Paul Otellini and Dadi
Perlmutter, executive vice president and general manager of Intel’s
Architecture Gr…


Chip Shot: Intel Receives Corporate Philanthropy Award

Today Intel CEO Paul Otellini is accepting an award from the Committee Encouraging Corporate Philanthropy, an organization founded by actor-philanthropist Paul Newman. While Intel is being recognized for overall excellence in corporate philanthropy, the award highlights the Intel Teach program as Intel’s most significant initiative. The Intel Teach program is celebrating its tenth anniversary this year and has trained more than seven million teachers in 60 countries on the effective use of technology in the classroom to improve learning. Get more info here.

Chip Shot: Best Ideas Yet to Come: Intel Challenges Entrepreneurs

To fuel innovation and prime new entrepreneurs for success, Intel CEO Paul Otellini announced the Intel Challenge, which awards university students funding to turn business plans into real ventures. Otellini announced this initiative during his keynote at the World Congress on IT in Amsterdam, where he also asserted that investments in IT will accelerate our global economy. More info here.

Intel CEO: Fostering an Innovation Economy

WORLD CONGRESS ON INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY, Amsterdam, May 25, 2010 – Intel Corporation President and CEO Paul Otellini today said that innovation and investments in information and communications technology (ICT) will accelerate economic recovery and jobs growth worldwide.

Intel, AMD Chip Businesses Continue to Evolve

CEO Paul Otellini says the industry should stop viewing Intel as solely a chip maker and come to see it as a computing business, complete with software and services. For its part, AMD, with its Vision strategy, is looking to change how consumers buy PCs; at the same time, the company sees the 2011 release of its Fusion chips as an avenue into electronic devices beyond the core PC and server markets.
– Officials from Intel and Advanced Micro Devices this week once again spoke
about the changing dynamics in the computer industry and their companies’ efforts
to change with them.
During a meeting with investors May 11, Intel CEO
Paul Otellini and other executives spoke about how they expect earni…


Intel to Invest 2,300 Million Pesos (US$177 Million) to Expand Guadalajara Design Center

MEXICO CITY, April 26, 2010 – During a press conference with Mexico President Felipe Calderon, Intel Corporation President and CEO Paul Otellini announced the company would invest 2,300 million pesos (US$177 million) over 3 years to expand Intel’s Guadalajara Design Center (GDC).

Intel Heads $3.5B Investment in U.S. Companies

Intel is leading a group of venture capital firms and IT businesses, including Dell, Cisco Systems, Hewlett-Packard, Google and Microsoft, in investing up to $3.5 billion over the next two years in U.S. tech companies and increasing the hiring of recent U.S. college graduates. The goal of the Invest in America Alliance is to help the economy of the United States and improve its competitiveness in the world.
– Intel is leading a large group of venture capital firms and IT
vendors in creating an investment vehicle to pump $3.5 billion into U.S.-based
technology companies over the next two years.
At a speech Feb. 23 at the Brookings Institution, in Washington,
Intel CEO Paul Otellini announced the Inves…


Invest in America Alliance to Fund American Technology Companies, Create Jobs for College Grads

WASHINGTON, D.C., Feb. 23, 2010 – Intel President and CEO Paul Otellini today announced a $3.5 billion initiative to support investment in U.S.-based growth-oriented industries and detailed a commitment to significantly increase jobs available this year for recent college graduates.

Chip Shot: Intel Supports German Academy of Science and Engineering’s Embedded Internet Advances

Intel CEO Paul Otellini announced that Intel will support a new research initiative by acatech, the German Academy of Science and Engineering. The initiative, “Integrated Research Agenda Cyber-Physical Systems,” will span 18 months and is focused on advancing the embedded Internet by identifying potential future industries where Germany will have an advantage, furthering the country’s competitiveness in the global economy. acatech’s agenda aligns with Intel’s view of the Embedded Internet – a vision where all electronic devices and many machines eventually become more PC-like and connected to the Internet. These connected devices will contribute to solving a variety of social and economic challenges, enhance safety and improve communications, entertainment and commerce.