Intel Was Slow to Embrace Low-power Chips, Exec Says

Intel engineers first began toying with a low-power microprocessor almost a decade ago, but their initial design was rejected by the company’s top executives and the effort stalled soon after, an Intel executive said on Wednesday.

The initial concept behind Atom, Intel’s new family of low-power chips for mobile devices, had its genesis in a research project at Intel’s labs in 1999, but the idea was not “received enthusiastically” by Intel’s senior staff, said Justin Rattner [CQ], Intel’s chief technology officer, during a speech at Intel’s “research day” in Santa Clara, California.

Sunday, June 15th, 2008

Europeans are new spam kings says Symantec

According to a new Symantec report [PDF link], 44 per cent of the world’s spam comes from Europe, which is up a whopping 14 per cent since November 2007. The company also claims that although North America exported 46 per cent of the world’s spam in November, it doles out just 36 per cent today.

Symantec says Europe’s growth in spam production is probably due to high-speed internet access across the continent.

(more…)

Thursday, February 7th, 2008