Intel has launched a standalone FPGA (field-programmable gate array) business, branding it Altera - after the company it acquired in 2015. The company will sell reconfigurable chips for systems across ...
Altera – Intel’s standalone company focused on FPGA hardware – introduced an array of FPGA hardware, software, and services at its annual developer conference. Nine months ago, Intel spun out Altera ...
Intel Corp. and its subsidiary Altera today unveiled a range of new processors and field-programmable gate arrays or FPGAs designed to extend artificial intelligence capabilities to the network edge.
Intel Corp. today launched its standalone FPGA business, which will sell reconfigurable chips for systems ranging from cell towers to robots. The business traces its roots to a chipmaker called Altera ...
Intel is taking its FGPA lineup beyond the data center and extending its Agilex products to remote, edge computing, and embedded systems. Seven years after its $16.7 billion acquisition of FPGA maker ...
March 1, 2024 — Intel announced the official launch of Altera, its new standalone FPGA company. During the FPGA Vision Webcast, Chief Executive Officer Sandra Rivera and Chief Operating Officer ...
It seems like the chip war between Intel and ARM is slowly winding down, at least for the time being. Intel for decades has doggedly sworn by chips based on its homegrown x86 architecture, but the ...
Intel (NASDAQ: INTC) announced on Monday that it had agreed to sell a 51% stake in Altera, the FPGA specialist it acquired in 2015, to investment firm Silver Lake. While Intel will retain a 49% stake ...
Intel has agreed to shell out a whopping $16.7 billion to acquire Altera, a company that makes something Intel lacks: FPGAs (field-programmable gate arrays), which are reprogrammable chips. Some of ...
As AMD is getting closer to closing its $35 billion acquisition of FPGA maker Xilinx, it is natural to think about how well that business is doing and how it is competing against its main rival, Intel ...
today announced that the companies have entered into an agreement for the future manufacture of Altera FPGAs on Intel's 14 nm tri-gate transistor technology. These next-generation products, which ...