For the past two decades, Intel has taken on the processor makers for servers and storage in the datacenter and vanquished all but a few suppliers of alternative architectures from the glass house.
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 ...
Chip giant Intel has been talking about CPU-FPGA compute complexes for so long that it is hard to remember sometimes that its hybrid Xeon-Arria compute unit, which puts a Xeon server chip and a ...
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 ...
Intel has started shipping Stratix 10 SX, a field-programmable gate array (FPGA) system with an integrated chip based on technology designed by ARM. The device is positioned as a hardware acceleration ...
Intel refreshed its FPGA line-up with cost-optimized offerings, released its FPGA software stack as open source, and added a new processor design based on the RISC-V architecture. The first of the new ...
In this guest post, Intel explores how Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs) can be used to accelerate high performance computing. A Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) is a user-customizable ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Dave Altavilla is a Tech Analyst covering chips, compute and AI. When Intel acquired FPGA (Field Programmable Gate Array) chip ...
As web giants such as Google and Facebook customise their huge IT estates to drive down running costs, Intel is trying to meet their needs by making its chips more flexible. Its latest step is to ...
Intel Corporation announced in August 2019 that it had begun shipments of the first Intel Agilex field programmable gate arrays. Early access program customers were using Agilex FPGAs to develop ...
When it comes to speeding up computationally intensive workloads, GPUs are not the only game in town. FPGAs (field-programmable gate arrays) are also gaining traction in data centers. While companies ...