Esquire North is a posh bachelor apartment on the tree-lined edge of New York's Central Park and Harlem. This is a behind-the-scenes look shot on the day before the doors opened on September 27, 2007. Intel and top fashion, interior and art designers have joined Esquire magazine over the years to help create the ultimate bachelor pad. Live like a king at least for fund raising (CARE) night party, test drive F1 racing powered by Intel Quad Core processors while sitting in eel-skin covered racing seats, lounge with an UMPC or watch HD in any room streamed form a dream home hub powered by Intel Viiv (Core 2 Quad) technology. This apartment has two outdoor terraces and an Italian designed spiral glass & metal staircase. Esquire Publisher Kevin O'Malley shares stories and we see tech reporter Marc Saltzman geeking out on gadgets in the home.
Intel Science Talent Search 2008 Inspiration Timothy Chang
A new processor for the ultra-mobile market is Intel’s latest move to revolutionize mobility computing, from UMPCs to mobile Internet devices and even notebooks and desktops (er, “netbooks” and “net-tops”). While Atom (née Silverthorne) received its brand-new brand name recently, the family of tiny processors, which relies on 45nm technology just like the Penryn line of Core 2 Duo processors, will debut in devices on display at IDF in Shanghai in early April. It’s no secret that China has come a long way in a short time — from being a country known for manufacturing cheap products for export to being, potentially, the next great IT superpower. National Science Board figures show that in 1994 there were only seven U.S. companies doing research in China. Ten years later, that number had risen to more than 500. Gartner analysts James Popkin and Partha Iyengar wrote, in their 2007 book I.T. and the East, that the world “will witness the birth of a real IT superpower if government ...
Matthew McCarthy and Adam Magill from Ireland show off their all-terrain motorcycle and helmet wired for safety. They're first year high school scientists competing in the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair, May 2008.
09:49
Investing in Innovation -- Intel Capital CEO Summit 2008
Intel Capital CEO Summit brought 8 investments totaling over $60 million. Deals, primarily led by Intel Capital, include: India-based Vriti Infocom (online education); Czech Republic-based Internet Mall (online retail); and several U.S.-based companies including Accertify (online security), TOA Technologies (workforce management software), Grid Net (energy efficiency, smart grid), HealthiNation (online health), Vostu (social networking with a Latin America focus) and Veoh Networks (online videos).
Itâs been awhile since we first began hearing about WiMAX, and it may have sounded impossible at first. Not to "Somewhat Frank" Gruber. The Intel Insider social media adviser says it was inevitable, that it works, and itâs cool. Here's Frank in Baltimore at a celebration for the city becoming the first big WiMAX hotspot. No matter where you are, you can be Internet connected thanks to WiMAX, the next generation of mobile broadband access.
Diane Bryant worked her way up to Intel Chief Information Officer using her engineering skills. She talks about innovative skills women share around the world, and encourages more female students to get involved with engineering and the sciences.
Research@Intel Day, Rob Ennals of Intel Labs Berkeley shows Dispute Finder, which helps identify disputed claims on news & information found online. It lets you vote your beliefs, and see both sides of an argument & what the public believes is true.
09:56
Intel, Microsoft Optimize Windows 7 Performance Party One
During a briefing in San Francisco in September 2009, Intel and Microsoft engineers showed how they worked together to optimize the Windows 7 operating system to run efficiently on Intel technology.
In this video podcast straight from Intel’s Spring IDF in Shanghai, the spotlight is on the keynote demos that showed power and performance in newer, smaller and more innovative form factors, many powered by the Intel’s Atom processor. Many of the demonstrations focused on mobility, and they all provided an exciting look at some of the technologies that are just around the corner. Dr. Ren Ng, president and CEO of Refocus Imaging, led a demo of his company’s light field cameras, which record the full light field as it enters the camera, ultimately extending the capabilities of conventional digital cameras and “turning camera hardware into software.” Ng explains that by doing this, light field cameras “bring the economics and power of Moore’s Law to the camera system.” (snapshots from their Web site illustrate the demo, which they re-created live, on stage at IDF!). Also on hand was Dr. Mendel Rosenblum, co-founder and chief scientist at VMware. He shared the stage with Intel Senior ...
In this video podcast, Intel Senior Vice President and General Manager, Digital Enterprise Group, Pat Gelsinger explains Intel architecture and its wide-ranging capabilities (”architecture for life”), and Intel Senior Vice President and General Manager of Intel’s Mobility Group, Dadi Perlmutter and Intel Senior Vice President and General Manager, Ultra Mobility Group, Anand Chandrasekher update the crowd on the latest on the mobile Internet devices and their innovative technology, powered by the Intel Atom processor. This year’s Spring IDF took place in Shanghai.
President Bush honored Intel CEO Paul Otellini for the company's volunteer efforts. As Intel is turning 40 in 2008, and to celebrate employees are committing one million hours of volunteer service. See president Bush honor Intel and other leaders in volunteering here http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2008/04/20080429-5.html
Krisi Dode and Jona Basha arrived early in Atlanta from Albania. They describe research and a plan for decreasing air pollution that accumulates just above ground. This could improve air quality for children.
William from Burmingham, Alabama shows his Wi-Fi visualization system for detecting best Wi-Fi service to the Internet. Intel International Science and Engineering Fair May 2008.
Say, are there any bugs in there? Research@Intel Day June 11, 2008 featured a look at new techniques for improving and speeding up quality analysis for chips using electromagnetic probing.
Wireless Resonant Energy Link -- wireless power transfer -- was shown at Research@Intel day June 18, 2009.
Sanjay Natarajan is an Intel rock star and director of logic technology development for the worldâs first microprocessors built with 32 nanometer process, codenamed Westmere. Sanjay shares how Intel has reinvented the transistor again, improving upon Intelâs leading 45nm processor by creating smaller gate pitch and higher drive performance. He talks about using immersion lithography technique for the first time, and how different teams across Intel optimized new energy efficiency and performance features that will be available inside all new Intel Core microprocessors in 2010.
08:57
Intel, Microsoft Optimize Windows 7 Virtualization Part 1
During a briefing in San Francisco in September 2009, Intel and Microsoft engineers showed how they worked together to optimize the Windows 7 operating system to run efficiently on Intel technology.
One of the many opportunities for Intel leaders to answer questions from press, bloggers — anyone, really — is the popular panel q&a, "Shoptalk." This time, Intel Fellows including Matthew Adiletta, Ajay Bhatt, Richard Lee Coulson, John Crawford, Vivek De, Kevin Kahn, P. Geoffrey Lowney, Eugene S. Meieran, Thomas A. Piazza and Raj Yavatkar fielded questions about Intel, the future of technology, the speed of developing platforms and processors, memory, voice recognition, Intel's strategies in planning for the future, and those blue aprons. What comes after silicon-based technology? How is Intel addressing growing concerns about the environmental impacts of technology? What about scaling for nanotechnology? The future of DRAM?
People holding a sliver of silicon for the first time tell about how Intel technology inspires the genius in them.
Not finding what you want? View results from YouTube.
Comments