In this video, Motley Fool contributor Jason Hall explains why Intel ( INTC -3.43%) faces a hard path forward, but has the potential to be a market-beating stock over the next five years. *Stock prices used were from the afternoon of Jan.
Intel (NASDAQ: INTC) stock rose more than 9% on Jan. 17 after online news site SemiAccurate reported that a mystery buyer expressed interest in buying the company. That put the spotlight on the troubled chipmaker that once dominated the semiconductor industry.
Intel proposed a modular laptop design for laptops and mini-PCs that focuses on the right-to-repair and sustainability.
Ark., explains on 'Sunday Night in America' why President Donald Trump is 'rightly concerned' about China's threats to U.S. national security.
Intel is proposing a new kind of architecture for laptops and mini PCs that would extend the lifespan of devices and decrease e-waste.
Intel's bullish technical momentum in 2025 indicates potential for strong investor gains with low valuation and strategic restructuring. Read an analysis of INTC.
Yahoo Finance dives into Intel's quest for a new CEO as the struggling chipmaker evaluates several outsiders, while some reports suggest there may be a mystery company eyeing an Intel acquisition.
Intel’s proposed design integrates separate components for the new LPCAMM memory standard, plus the more common Wi-Fi and SSD upgrades that can be handled with M.2 cards. Intel says that these designs offer “seamless scaling” for laptops with screen sizes from 14 to 16 inches, with options for fanless, single-fan, and dual-fan cooling.
Whatever your stance on environmental conservation as a whole, you have to agree that generating millions of tons of e-waste due to obsolescent hardware is sub-optimal. There are a lot of reasons to want to reduce this number,
Intel's Arc B580 beats it on value, but the budget-minded Arc B570 (tested here as an ASRock Challenger card) delivers intense ray-tracing performance and competitive, if at times inconsistent, gaming speeds for the money.
Intel has published an article proposing a modular PC design that would improve the repairability/right-to-repair of laptops and mini PCs and reduce
AI inference has long been a focus area for former Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger; that interest continues in his post-Intel investment in AI startup Fractile.