28 July, 2008

Intel Corporation

Intel Corporation, leading manufacturer of microprocessors and integrated circuits. The company invented the microprocessor, which powers personal computers. The company also makes computer network products, memory products, servers, and supercomputers. Intel is based in Santa Clara, California.
The company was founded in 1968 when engineers Gordon Moore and Bob Noyce left Fairchild Semiconductor of Mountain View, California, to form their own company. The two were soon joined by Andrew Grove, who became chief executive officer of Intel in 1987. The name Intel came from the term integrated electronics.Intel focused on making an affordable semiconductor that could hold enough memory to replace the magnetic core memory then used in computers. The company’s first successful products were the dynamic random-access memory circuit (DRAM) in 1970, which won acceptance among manufacturers of mainframe computers, and the erasable programmable read-only memory (EPROM) chip in 1971, which allowed memory to be erased and reused without reprogramming
In 1998 Andrew Grove, whose engineering knowledge and aggressive drive had helped build Intel into a global powerhouse, resigned from his position as the company’s chief executive officer. He remained chairman of Intel’s board of directors. Also that year, Intel bought the semiconductor manufacturing operations of Digital Equipment Corporation for about $625 million as part of an agreement that settled a patent dispute between the two companies.
In June 1998 the U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) filed an antitrust suit against Intel. The suit charged Intel with abusing its power in the market for microprocessors by withholding key technical information from computer manufacturers who had refused to license patents to Intel. In early 1999 Intel and the FTC settled the lawsuit before going to trial. However, the FTC continued to investigate other aspects of Intel’s use of market power.
In 2000 Intel debuted a 1-gigahertz (1,000-megahertz) Pentium III just days after longtime industry rival Advanced Micro Devices announced it had developed the first-ever microprocessor of that speed. A year later Intel introduced the Pentium 4 processor, capable of operating at a speed of 2.5 gigahertz, according to an independent performance test conducted in 2002. In 2003 Intel introduced its Centrino mobile technology, which provides computer users with a wireless link to the Internet through Wi-Fi networks.
In 2007 Intel formally unveiled the Teraflop Research Chip, also known as Polaris, which is capable of performing more than one trillion operations per second while drawing only 62 watts of power, comparable to a low-wattage light bulb. The breakthrough technology would give ordinary computer users the power of a supercomputer, like the one Intel helped build for the U.S. Department of Energy in 1996. That supercomputer, however, took up 230 sq m (2,500 sq ft) of space and required 500 kilowatts of power to run and 500 kilowatts of power to cool. The new chip, which measures 275 sq mm (0.43 sq in), would require a radical breakthrough in software for it to be commercially viable and was not expected to go into production until 2012 at the earliest.

time in Nepal