Intel has delivered a sneak preview of the innovations and products expected
at the Intel Developer Forum (IDF) in San Francisco next week.
The company is continuing to push
Moore's
Law, the theory propounded by Intel co-founder Gordon Moore which states
that the transistor count on an integrated circuit doubles approximately every
two years, despite some saying that chip development is approaching its physical
limits.
"Contrary to speculation that Moore's Law is slowing down or potentially
dying, we are here to demonstrate that it's alive and well," said Steve Smith,
vice president of Intel. "Integration gives you a smaller, better, faster and
more mobile compute platform."
Smith explained that the focus of this year's show is integration, and how
Intel is "driving PC capabilities into a broad range of new and innovative
products, from handhelds to consumer electronics to high-end servers".
This is IDF's 12th year and the company will be showcasing a host of
innovations across a wide range of technologies, including 'Westmere', the
codename for its latest 32nm chips due out later this year.
There will also be news regarding Intel's expansion of its Nehalem
architecture from the recently announced
Core
i5 range, to the netbook and mobile markets.
The firm is set to deliver updates on its solid state drives, controller
chips, system-on-chip systems for embedded and consumer electronic products, and
its next-generation 'Larabee' graphics chipset.
IDF will also see a bigger push into the netbook and mobile internet device
markets, both in terms of software, with improvements to Intel's Moblin
open-source operating system, and hardware, with new chipsets, architectures and
updates to the Atom range of processors.
The opening keynote will be delivered by Intel chief executive Paul Otellini,
alongside senior vice president Pat Gelsinger, who announced today that he is
leaving
Intel after 30 years to join storage firm EMC.
Do you agree?
Have your say on this article