Tim Farrell, Strategic Planning Manager for Intel’s North American marketing group, presents an update to the Intel product and technology roadmap at a recent Intel Premier IT Professionals event. (more…)
Posts Tagged ‘roadmap’
Intel Product Roadmap
Thursday, October 22nd, 2009Building Upon the Intel Technology Roadmap
Tuesday, September 22nd, 2009Intel strategic planning managers take a close look at Intel’s product and technology plans in this roadmap presented at recent Intel Premier IT Professional events.
Building Upon the Intel Technology Roadmap
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Intel’s 2H09 Public Desktop, Server and Mobile Roadmap
Thursday, July 2nd, 2009Are you wondering what’s in store from Intel the rest of this year? Find the latest product and technology roadmap covering Intel’s desktop, server and mobile product lines in this 2H09 public roadmap. (more…)
Intel Technology Roadmap
Monday, June 1st, 2009After explaining Intel’s “tick tock” microprocessor innovation process, Intel’s Senior Server Strategist Jesse Treger proceeds to look at the client and server technology roadmaps. (more…)
Intel Server Roadmap
Thursday, May 7th, 2009Get the latest snapshot of the newest Intel® Xeon® processors for servers. This updated version of the Intel server roadmap presentation comes with a much-requested feature by our members — a voiceover commentary. (more…)
IA: The Intelligent Architecture Investment Slides
Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009In his recent keyote at the Intel Developer Forum, Pat Gelsinger, Intel senior vice president and general manager of the Digital Enterprise Group, discussed Intel’s latest client, server and embedded product lines, and gave developers an update on the latest programming tools available for the Larrabee architecture. (more…)
IA: The Intelligent Architecture Investment
Tuesday, April 21st, 2009During his keynote, titled “IA: The Intelligent Architecture Investment,” Pat Gelsinger, Intel senior vice president and general manager of the Digital Enterprise Group, discussed Intel’s latest client, server and embedded product lines, and gave developers an update on the latest programming tools available for the Larrabee architecture.
Intel’s complete Intel architecture future product roadmap was also revealed. Gelsinger said the “Nehalem” microarchitecture has received worldwide acclaim with the Core® i7 processor launch in 2008 and the recent Nehalem-based Intel® Xeon® 5500 series introduction. The Xeon 5500 series combines the world’s leading processor microarchitecture with a new memory and I/O subsystem, Intel® QuickPath Interconnect and Intel® Intelligent Power Technology to control power consumption.
Gelsinger said Intel and the industry now look to adopting more mainstream PC and laptop versions of the Nehalem microarchitecture, including 32nm manufactured versions with on-processor graphics, as well the multi-socket Nehalem EX server processor, all in production in the second half of 2009. The future Nehalem-EX processor will provide eight cores for the multiprocessor “intelligent server” market.
For embedded computers, Gelsinger discussed a range of recently announced Intel® Atom™ processor solutions with industrial temp for applications such as in-vehicle infotainment and industrial automation. He also disclosed, for the first time ever, the Nehalem-EP based processor (codenamed “Jasper Forest”) that is specifically designed to deliver increased compute density and integration required for embedded and storage applications.
Gelsinger also addressed Larrabee, which is Intel’s first many-core architecture designed for high throughput applications and features a programmable graphics pipeline that enables developer freedom. The Intel executive discussed availability of a C++ Larrabee Prototype Library and a future parallel programming solution based on “Ct” technology. The first Larrabee discrete graphics products are due in the late 2009/2010 timeframe.
Bottoms Up or Tops Down? Intel Roadmap Delivers Increasing Capabilities for IT
Tuesday, June 3rd, 2008Although some of the products have been announced since this article was written, it still offers an interesting point/counterpoint on the Intel product roadmap from two Intel strategists who approach it from opposing directions. Is it the industry trends like virtualization, energy-efficient computing and cloud computing that are driving technology development? Or is it the increasing performance and capabilities offered by the latest microprocessors. Read and then pick your side. (more…)
- Intel Premier IT Magazine – Summer 2008 Edition: What’s Your IT Utopia?
- Wargaming: How Intel Creates a Company-Wide Security Force
- The Consumerization of IT
- Increasing Call Center Productivity
- Best Practices for Deploying Macs for the Enterprise
- At Intel, IT = Information + Technology
- Bottoms Up or Tops Down? Intel Roadmap Delivers Increasing Capabilities for IT
- Containers Everywhere
- Investment, Innovation and Integration Support Intel Capital’s Open Source Strategy
- Virtualization, Service Orientation, and Grid Computing: The Next Big Things
- Top Enterprise Technologies
- Streaming: Performance Gain or Server Drain?
- Improving IT Efficiency, Maximizing Taxpayer Dollars
- Hybrid Computing: Fitting the Solution to the Workflow
- Intel® Multi-Core Performance Enhances Creativity at Sony Pictures Imageworks
