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40 Years of Changing the World
In 2008, Intel celebrated its 40th birthday. Here Bill Gates, Michael Dell, and Gianfranco Lanci (CEO of Acer) share their thoughts on how Intel people and technology have changed the world in the past 40 years. The anniversary was a time for looking at how technology innovation has helped improve our lives and communities around the world.
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When the PC Turned 20
See what the PC looked like when it turned 20. Here's a look back at the history of the PC. This video was originally released in March 2001.
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Moore's Law Got Me
Science gurus Adam Savage and Jamie Hyneman race through speed and time to show the explosive wonders of Moore's Law, which is a the core of advances in computer technology.
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Connecting Patients with Care |
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Steve Agritelley of Intel’s Digital Heath Group tells how his team is developing technologies that offering more personalized and effective management of chronic health conditions for people. These technologies will help address the challenges of an aging population and rising rates of chronic disease.
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Energy Smart Mobile Devices |
Manny Vara from Intel Labs talks about research that will help remove the need to plug devices into electrical outlets, and how devices could "trickle charge" even from energy absorbed by light or human touch.
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Ed Hill from Intel’s Embedded Communication Group shows a internet-connected kiosk and cash register for retail stores. These could help shoppers find exactly what they didn’t know they were looking for, order items and have them shipped from the store, and pay using their smart phone.
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Intelligent Media and 3-D |
Sean Koehl from Intel Labs shows how future computers powered by multi-core processors will be able to bring amazing 3-D visuals and the ability to intelligently manage digital media, allowing you to record and view just the highlights you want to see.
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Internet on Your TV Widget Channel |
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Bill Leszinske from Intel’s Digital Home Group shows how to access your online photos, news, entertainment and social networks on a big TV using the Widget Channel developed by Intel and Yahoo!
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What Innovation Means to a Social Scientist |
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Intel Researcher Eric Dishman shares his take on the role of innovation for social scientists. He is an ethnographer who has helped Intel create new digital health technologies.
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The Widget Channel will offer TV viewers what iPhone's "Apps Store" offers phone users. TV Widgets will radically simplify the visual interface for consumers to access their favorite Internet applications while simultaneously watching their favorite broadcast programs.
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WiMAX Celebrated in Baltimore |
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Baltimore becomes the first city in the country where a full-scale commercial wireless broadband rollout (offered by Sprint and XOHM) means people can roam wherever they want and connect to the Internet with notebook computers and Mobile Internet Devices. Here's the October 8, 2008 celebration of the people behind WiMAX in Baltimore.
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Innovate At the Speed of Thought |
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Execs from Intel and Autodesk discuss the revolution of digital prototyping: the ability to design, visualize, and simulate a manufacturing design on Intel Xeon processor-based workstation that has the power of a deskside supercomputer.
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Investing in Chip Making Innovation |
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This "Invention, Innovation, Investment" video was first shown by Intel CEO Paul Otellini in Washington DC on February 10, 2008, when he publicly shared Intel's plan to invest $7 Billion over the next two years to create new, cutting edge chip manufacturing facilities in the U.S. This footage shows how Intel is moving from manufacturing microprocessors using 45 nanometer circuitry to even smaller 32 nanometer circuitry.
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Making of Intel® Core™ i7 |
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Go inside the benchmarking lab in Santa Clara, California and in labs in Hillsboro, Oregon to see first-hand the enthusiasm, brilliance and dedication that went into creating the new Core i7 microarchitecture, codenamed "Nehalem." The Core i7 can handle more data, quicker and more energy efficiently. "Building this microprocessor brings a lot of people together, like architects, micro architects and the design teams," says Rani Borkar, vice president of Intel's Digital Enterprise Group. "As you get into the development phases, working with the process technology, it's a mind-boggling effort that requires a lot of teamwork across the board."
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