Chip maker Intel has announced plans to invest $50 million (£33 million) in quantum computing research, which could help boost the capabilities of high performance computers.
The MIIX 700 will start shipping this November and will start at $699. While we’re expecting Microsoft to announce an update to Surface Pro 3 in a bumper event in October, at the moment it’s still using Intel‘s 4th-generation “Haswell” processors in...
OpenStack is available in free and commercial versions in an arrangement that helps customers avoid being locked into one vendor. It is venture-backed by August Capital, Ericsson, Intel Capital, Insight Venture Partners, Sapphire Ventures and WestSummit Capital. It has even...
OpenStack company Mirantis opines that a technological and financial alliance with Intel Corporation (NASDAQ:INTC) that includes an investment of $100m will greatly boost the open-source cloud project by accelerating the introduction of additional enterprise features.
Regardless of whether the first-gen iPad Pro will actually help Apple kill laptops, including some of its own MacBooks, Kuo still sees the device as a relative success, saying Apple could sell some 5.5 million units this year, along with as many as 1 million styluses.
For nearly 20 years, Intel has been building technology to help Stephen Hawking communicate with the world – and now the company is making the same software the world renowned physicist uses to write books, give speeches and talk available to everybody. Its source code and...
US technology firm Intel, best known for its semiconductor chips, is jumping into reality TV with a competition pitting makers of wearables and smart connected consumer devices.
Stephen Hawking has long been a household name thanks to his research and books and, most recently the Oscar-winning film about him “The Theory of Everything” – and his speech software may soon be, too.
According to The Wall Street Journal, the network is in the process of creating America’s Greatest Makers, a new series backed by Survivor creator Mark Burnett and sponsored by Intel that will pit competitors against each other to create the next big wearable device.