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Is Broadcom back in for the beleaguered chip giant? Or could Nokia or Ericsson look to snap up a vital supplier for their ...
While Intel currently holds almost 80% of the global CPU market, as Nokia has shown us, that number can shrink to almost nothing virtually overnight, unless you're willing to acknowledge which way ...
Nokia signed on to continue its long-standing team up with Intel, tapping its Xeon 6 line, specifically the Xeon 6780E, to provide energy-efficient capacity to power its NFVI v5.0 and Core ...
Intel and Nokia will also work together to develop an open-source operating system for mobile devices, bringing together the Moblin OS that Intel developed for products based on its own low ...
Intel already sells Atom chips for netbooks -- small, no-frills computers good for Web surfing -- and Nokia has said it would look into the possibly of expanding beyond phones to develop netbooks.
The successful trial enables Nokia and Intel to push forward with Verizon to develop its new vRAN 2.0 architecture, which will use cloud computing capabilities that maximize efficiencies in ...
They start with Nokia, which felt compelled to warn the world about the negative effects of Trump’s tariffs, a topic that yields some fruitful tangents. Eventually the focus turns to Intel and its ...
Nokia's share price rose two percent to 4.76 euros ($4.92) on Monday in midday trading. When Lundmark took over as the company's CEO in 2020, Nokia's share price was at around four euros, Riikola ...
Intel, Nokia, and Symbian today announced a collaboration to bring smartphones based on Nokia's Series 60 Platform to market using Intel's XScale processor technology. Intel XScale processors are ...
Nokia's move to the Windows Phone OS took the "wind" out of possible volume sales of Intel smartphone chips this year, but the chip maker has moved on, Intel CEO Paul Otellini said this week.
The two did say that they’re going to be sharing Nokia’s HSPA/3G modem technology so Intel can put those into their own equipment, and that they’re going to be all up in the open source world.
Nokia was the world’s largest mobile-phone maker in 2008, according to IDC. Nokia shipped around 468.4 million phones, followed by Samsung, which shipped 196.7 million phones.