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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 makes mobile phones. Intel, the world's largest chipmaker, can't get its chips into mobile phones. On the other hand, Intel makes the silicon that powers the world's PCs.
Nokia has already unsuccessfully dabbled with tablets and Intel already has experimented with cellular phone technology, so both companies have the background to make something happen quickly, and ...
It would make a lot more sense for Nokia and Intel to get laser-focused on building powerful next-generation smartphones. With the N97, Nokia already has one of the most capable smartphones on the ...
Intel and Nokia have been sittin’ in a tree since February, when they agreed to cross-breed their mobile operating systems and form MeeGo. Now they’ve identified the next front in the mobile ...
A marriage between Intel and Nokia could be just the move that the chipmaker needs to help it make an impact on the mobile market that has so far eluded it Written by Ben Woods, Contributor Aug. 3 ...
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 wants a foothold in the US phone market, which has so far eluded it, and wants to move up into netbooks in a bigger way; Intel, for its part, wants to crack the mobile market and move down ...
Intel recently has entered that field with its Linux-based operating system called Moblin, designed to function on portable devices, and Nokia has a Linux-based operating system, dubbed Maemo.