Israel seen as major player as global chip war intensifies
With Intel s global chip hegemony being challenged, Globes surveys Israel s pivotal role in the battle, as high-tech salaries surge.
Recently, Google poached former senior Intel executive Uri Frank to lead its strategic chip development activity in Israel. Frank had headed Intel s semiconductor development for data centers and personal computers, responsible for some $30 billion in revenue each year. This expertise indicates he will very likely establish a similar activity in Israel, this time on behalf of Google.
Frank s recruitment is just a very small part what s happening in the semiconductor world - an explosion as one industry insider termed it. All of the major high-tech companies have chip development activity. Intel has always had a presence in Israel, but recently, Apple, Amazon, and Microsoft also began developing chips in Israel, with no signs of easing up. Now Google is joining the party. Globes has al
NS1 Earns 5-Star Rating in The 2021 CRN Partner Program Guide
finanznachrichten.de - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from finanznachrichten.de Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Twitter acquihires team from Reshuffle to work on its API platform – TechCrunch
techcrunch.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from techcrunch.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
2022 Snapdragon chipset aimed at high-performance ultraportables
Matthew Hughes Tue 16 Mar 2021 // 15:50 UTC Share
Copy
Qualcomm said today that its new internally designed CPUs are expected to sample in the second half of 2022 as it completed the purchase of chip designer Nuvia.
Bought for $1.4bn, the Arm data-centre chip design business launched in 2019 and swiftly raised a $53m Series A round from a bevy of investors that included Dell Technologies Capital and Mayfield. Nuvia s second $240m Series B round followed the next year.
Founded by former Apple Arm chip designer Gerard Williams, ex-Google (and Apple) system-on-chip architect Manu Gulati, and AMD architect John Bruno, the engineer behind the first IGP chipsets, the startup was initially aimed at creating custom ARM-based cores for server applications. Prior to its acquisition, the firm was working on two products: a Phoenix CPU core, and a separate SoC product called Orion. Both were made usin
Share this article
Share this article
SAN FRANCISCO, March 15, 2021 /PRNewswire/ Noodle.ai today introduced a new category of AI software for manufacturers called Flow Operations, or FlowOps, which enables a company to, for the first time, drive toward perfect operations flow and become a no-waste enterprise.
Noodle.ai has spent five years of R&D and invested $110 million developing its portfolio of artificial intelligence software.
(PRNewsfoto/Noodle.ai)
FlowOps technology solves the chronic problem of operations entropy in manufacturing and supply chain. Entropy is a tumble into disorder, seemingly random deviations, and unpredictable events that occur. Operations entropy leads to production problems and enormous waste: defective and obsolete products get tossed, trucks drive empty, unplanned downtime eats margins, supply doesn t accurately meet demand.