Intel will start selling a mobile version of the Core 2 Extreme processor for high-end gaming notebooks sometime during the third quarter of this year. Intel's Sean Maloney announced the new chip at Computex in Taipei.
Intel first showed off the Metro concept notebook at Intel Developers Forum last month. Business Week got an in-depth look at the notebook, which may be produced late this year. The Metro is fashionably thin, measuring less than .7-inch thick and weighs 2.25-pounds.
Intel is showing off a new UMPC at IDF that's supposed to launch sometime in 2008. Intel says this "this truy the full Iner...
Intel showed off a concept computer called the Metro Notebook at the Intel Developers Forum. The slim notebook is designed to be carried over your shoulder s...
This is Intel's take on the future of mobile computing. These slick devices will have impeccable speech recognition and connect seamlessly to your watc...
Intel announced a new brand of mobile processor technology for business notebooks. Intel Centrino Pro will extend the features designed for desktop business PCs called Intel vPro processor technology into its forthcoming high-performance notebook offering.
Intel Corporation announced today its entry into solid state drives with the Intel Z-U130 Value Solid-State Drive. Based on NAND flash memory with industry stan...
ASUS announced that its S6Fm, V1Jp, VX2, W2P and W6Fp notebooks will get Intel's Next-Gen Wireless-N network connection technology. This technology is an upgrad...
Intel Corporation today introduced the Intel Next-Gen Wireless-N network connection, an upgrade to the wireless component found inside Intel Centrino Duo mobi...
Lenovo unveiled its new ThinkPad Z61 series and R60 series, both combine Intel's Core Duo processors with newly enhanced multimedia and wireless connectivity...
Intel is throwing its weight behind a Laptop for developing countries called the “EduWise,†which will sell for $400. Intel’s Craig Barrett says MIT’s $100 notebook is just a gadget, and students in developing nations “need†more.
Leading notebook vendors, including Dell, Hewlett-Packard (HP), Acer and Asustek Computer, reportedly have slashed their orders for CPUs and chipsets already placed with Intel