Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Dev is the CEO of Jump, the strategy firm for future-focused leaders. Too many leaders fall into the same trap. They witness major ...
Earlier today, Intel and NVIDIA announced the two tech giants are planning to co-develop several generations of data center and PC products, with the latter also investing $5 billion into the former's ...
In our view, the Intel–Nvidia pact further accentuates Nvidia Corp.’s dominant market position and represents a milestone in the transition to the next era of computing. Just as Intel Corp. had a lock ...
(Bloomberg) -- Nvidia Corp. agreed to invest $5 billion in Intel Corp. and said the two will co-develop chips for PCs and data centers, a surprise move to help prop up an ailing archrival that sent ...
Intel surged 30% after Nvidia's $5 billion investment, but the stock is now rated HOLD due to execution risks and valuation. NVDA's investment secures a potential second supplier beyond TSMC, but the ...
Intel Graphics Driver 32.0.101.8509 (WHQL Certified) brings XeSS 3 Multi-Frame Generation to all arc Graphics products, with no generation left behind.
Intel develops its own graphics technology for its CPUs and discrete GPUs. The company is partnering with Nvidia to produce CPUs with integrated Nvidia GPUs for PCs. With Nvidia now a partner, Intel ...
Surprise! We woke up this morning to a blockbuster mashup between Intel and Nvidia. Team Green invested a cool $5 billion into Intel, and in exchange, the two companies will be co-creating consumer ...
If you told me 25 years ago that Intel would end up in decline, that Nvidia would buy a chunk of the ailing company, and that the two would partner to build chips that integrate Intel x86 CPU cores ...
Nvidia is investing $5 billion in Intel; this follows the U.S. government’s recent investment in the struggling chipmaker. The deal is a clear positive for Intel but also represents a winning move for ...
Part of Intel's (NASDAQ: INTC) turnaround strategy, now under CEO Lip-Bu Tan and previously under former CEO Pat Gelsinger, is to exit noncore businesses and refocus on what the company does best.