🔒 Intel challenges Nvidia’s semiconductor market dominance with Gaudi 3 AI chip
In a bid to rival Nvidia, Intel Corporation unveils Gaudi 3, its latest AI chip, targeting the booming semiconductor sector.
In a bid to rival Nvidia, Intel Corporation unveils Gaudi 3, its latest AI chip, targeting the booming semiconductor sector.
With Intel’s manufacturing process trying to play catch up with key competitor, Intel has to make a ton of investments to remain competitive.
Tech companies are trimming staff and slowing hiring as they face higher interest rates and sluggish consumer spending in the US.
Intel is planning a major reduction in headcount, to cut costs and cope with a sputtering personal computer market.
Nvidia data centre division recorded sales of $1.9bn for the quarter, more than double the year-earlier figure, says the Wall Street Journal.
In the new world, the value of transparent and honest communication is priceless. Businesses which fail to recognise this are going to lose big.
Reading last night’s quarterly results from tech giants Alphabet, Microsoft and Intel suggests even better is to come for the pioneer of cloud computing.
Donald Trump has applied another leadership secret of always trying to hire people smarter than yourself. Jacob Zuma is the obvious contrast.
Andy Grove died yesterday. Co-founder of Intel, the now $55 billion a year semiconductor chip company, he was 79.
Ted Black looks at how Steve Jobs grew Apple from a $2.5 billion company when he returned to the $750 billion company it is today.