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Posts Tagged ‘paul otellini’

Intel CEO: ‘Computing No Longer Confined to the PC – It’s Everywhere’

INTERNATIONAL CONSUMER ELECTRONICS SHOW, Las Vegas, Jan. 7, 2010 – Intel Corporation President and CEO Paul Otellini today talked about how “personal computing” is expanding beyond the PC to nearly every kind of electronic device, transforming Intel and the industry in the process.

MEDIA ALERT – New Intel® Coreâ„¢ Processors Take Center Stage at CES

Keynote by CEO Paul Otellini Will Delve into Technology Trends for the Next Decade

Atom App Store by Intel

Mumbai: Intel’s CEO, Paul Otellini announcment to launch Atom App Store in September for developers was with the view that Atom is in many different devices.

The goal was write once and run in many places. Intel today made good on a promise from the Intel Developer Forum (IDF) to release a Software Development Kit (SDK) [...]

Chip Shot: Will Innovation Fuel the U.S. Economy?

Last night in Washington, D.C. Intel kicked off a two-day event with The Aspen Institute and PBS’s NewsHour on the role of innovation in America’s economic future. Speakers included PBS’s Gwen Ifill and Education Secretary Arne Duncan, Intel CEO Paul Otellini, Newsweek’s Jon Meacham with John Kao and Sir Harold Evans, and Judy Woodruff with Obama Economic Policy advisor Larry Summers. View videos here and follow the discussion on Twitter (hashtag: #innovateUS).

Chip Shot: Intel CEO to Discuss Investment Dollars and Innovative Sense at Tech Summit

At the sixth annual Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco, Intel President and CEO Paul Otellini will participate in an on-stage conversation at 8:30 a.m. PDT tomorrow, Oct. 22, with John Battelle, the conference’s co-founder. Their chat will be streamed live at this Web site. They will speak about the importance of investment in innovation, Intel’s business strategy and today’s most talked about technology trends. The 3-day Web 2.0 Summit, which concludes tomorrow, brings together leaders from the Internet industry with visionaries and executives across several industries to share their unique perspectives on the Web’s future and how the tools and principles of Web 2.0 are impacting their businesses.

Chip Shot: Intel CEO to Discuss Investment Dollars and Innovative Sense at Tech Summit

At the sixth annual Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco, Intel President and CEO Paul Otellini will participate in an on-stage conversation at 8:30 a.m. PDT tomorrow, Oct. 22, with John Battelle, the conference’s co-founder. Their chat will be streamed live at this Web site. They will speak about the importance of investment in innovation, Intel’s business strategy and today’s most talked about technology trends. The 3-day Web 2.0 Summit, which concludes tomorrow, brings together leaders from the Internet industry with visionaries and executives across several industries to share their unique perspectives on the Web’s future and how the tools and principles of Web 2.0 are impacting their businesses.

Intel Sees Strong Notebook Growth in Q3

Intel earned a $1.9 billion profit on $9.39 billion in revenue for the third quarter, and Intel CEO Paul Otellini noted the particularly strong demand for consumer notebooks, a trend he said will continue into the fourth quarter. Consumers will continue driving the recovery of the PC market into early next year as businesses continue to hold back on spending. However, Otellini said he expects to see corporate PC spending grow as the need to refresh aging systems grows and Microsofts Windows 7 OS hits the market.
– Intels third-quarter financial numbers indicate that consumer technology purchasing is continuing to grow, particularly in the notebook space.
The worlds largest chip maker earned almost $1.9 billion in profit just below the $2 billion earned during the same period last year on $9.39 billion in rev…


Intel CEO Otellini Calls for a Personal Health Strategy

In an op-ed piece, Intel CEO Paul Otellini said the United States needs to move away from a centralized health care system to a distributed one, where people take a greater responsibility for their well-being and technology can help connect them with their health care providers. Otellinis comments come as health care moves to the forefront of the national debate, and as technology vendors like Intel and Cisco look for ways that technology can be used to increase the reach of health care while lowering its costs.
– Intel CEO Paul Otellini believes the
national debate around health care reform needs to move away from doctors in
hospital and toward individuals in their homes.
Weighing in on the issue that is at the forefront of the Obama
administrations agenda, Otellini in an op-ed piece in
Politico July 27…


Chip Shot: Op-Ed by Intel CEO on ‘Personal Health Reformation’

“The nation’s debate about health care reform doesn’t seem all that healthy or reformatory,” Paul Otellini writes in an op-ed featured in the July 27 issue of Politico. Intel’s CEO goes on to discuss why we need a “personal health reformation,” which means leaving behind today’s outdated model of healthcare and shifting the focus to the individual and the home. Find out five things that we must do to bring about this reformation.

Strong Intel Numbers Signal Hope for IT Industry

Intel’s strong second quarter fuels hope that the global recession that has hammered the IT industry may be easing. Excluding a massive fine from the European Union, Intel reports a $1 billion profit on $8 billion in revenue. Intel CEO Paul Otellini echoes his counterparts from Dell and Microsoft by saying he expects enterprise purchases of servers and consumer purchases of PCs to pick up after the recession forced spending cuts. However, purchases of business PCs are expected remain stagnant.
– Three months after CEO Paul Otellini
announced that the PC
market had bottomed out, Intel’s latest quarterly numbers indicate that the
industry may be stabilizing.
Intel July 14 posted strong numbers in the second quarter, including $8
billion in revenue and a $1 billion profit. However, when t…


Intel results beat expectations

Intel micro processing chip

US chipmaker Intel has reported a better-than-expected net profit of $1bn (£610m) for April to June, excluding a massive European Commission fine.

Including the fine, levied for anti-competitive practices in May, the company made a loss of $398m.

Revenue for the three months stood at $8bn, a 15% fall compared with $9.4bn for the same period last year.

Earlier on Tuesday, banking giant Goldman Sachs also reported strong second-quarter results.

"Intel’s second quarter results reflect improving conditions in the PC market segment, with our strongest first to second quarter growth since 1988 and a clear expectation for a seasonally stronger second half," said Intel boss Paul Otellini.

Intel was fined just over 1bn euros by the European Commission for anti-competitive practices.

The Commission found that between 2002 and 2007, it had paid manufacturers and a retailer to favour its chips over those of Advanced Micro Devices (AMD).

Intel said it would appeal against the verdict. </p


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