Further Spectre and Meltdown-like flaws found
Reports have emerged that researchers have found eight new flaws in computer central processing units that resemble the Meltdown and Spectre bugs.
Reports have emerged that researchers have found eight new flaws in computer central processing units that resemble the Meltdown and Spectre bugs.
Intel has beat earnings expectations for the first quarter and raised its full-year revenue and profit forecasts, driven by the biggest-ever quarterly jump in its data center business and small-but-steady growth in its personal computer business.
Add Windows 7, Windows 8.1 to the list of Microsoft operating systems protected against Spectre and Meltdown, as well as the Kaby Lake, Coffee Lake, and Skylake chips from Intel.
Shareholders and customers have filed 32 class action lawsuits against Intel in connection with recently disclosed security flaws in its microchips.
U.S. chipmaker Qualcomm has been hit with a 997 million euro (AUD$1.5 billion) fine by European Union antitrust regulators for paying Apple Inc to use only its chips, blocking out rivals such as Intel
Intel has asked computer makers to stop rolling out a set of faulty patches it issued to fix security flaws in its chips and instead start testing an updated version.
Qualcomm has sued Apple, alleging that it violated a software license contract to benefit rival chipmaker Intel or making broadband modems
The Bank of New Zealand has become one of the first users of Intel’s Saffron platform.
Google has decided to appeal the record-breaking fine imposed on it by the European Union's highest antitrust authority in July.
The European Union's highest court has given Intel another chance to appeal a massive fine imposed in a 2009 antitrust ruling.
At a demonstration of Amazon Web Services new artificial intelligence image recognition tool last week, the deep learning analysis calculated with near certainty that a photo of speaker Glenn Gore depicted a potted plant.
Intel Security has released a tool that allows users to check if their computer's low-level system firmware has been modified and contains unauthorized code.
Smartphones with Intel-based x86 chips aren't dead yet. Intel may have stopped making Atom chips for smartphones, but a partner is keeping that effort alive.
Intel passed on the opportunity to make chips for the first iPhone, and in May discontinued Atom smartphone chips after wasting billions trying to get them in handsets. The chip company instead started building a new mobile identity around its modems and wireless connectivity assets.
Intel's Itanium chip is hanging by a thread, and after more than three years, the company is now shipping the next and possibly final version of the processor, which is code-named Kittson.