We recently compiled a list of the Goldman Sachs’ 35 AI Superstars. In this article, we are going to take a look at where Intel Corporation (NASDAQ:INTC) stands against the other AI stocks. In September 2024,
DeepSeek's $6M AI breakthrough sent shockwaves through the market, but Gelsinger says investors are getting it all wrong.
The DeepSeek technology has the potential of bringing more people into world of AI and expanding the transformative power of AI to a broader audience.
Intel is currently being led by co-CEOs David Zinsner, who also serves as CFO, and Michelle Johnston Holthaus, who is also CEO of Intel Products. The company is still searching for a permanent CEO to take the reins and attempt to revitalize the storied chipmaker.
As mentioned, Qualcomm's chipsets have long led the chipset market. As the 5G upgrade cycle has cooled, the company has pivoted to designing AI-enabled chips. To that end, it has developed the Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 chip for this purpose, and it should improve on its capabilities with the upcoming release of a Gen 4 chip.
AI inference has long been a focus area for former Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger; that interest continues in his post-Intel investment in AI startup Fractile.
Ex-CEO of Intel, Pat Gelsinger, has come out praising China's new DeepSeek R1 model: also announces he's buying the dip with cheap NVIDIA shares.
Analyst critiques Intel's overvaluation and strategic challenges, highlighting the impact on share price and potential risks for investors.
Intel channel partners told CRN that the chipmaker is making the right move by boosting partner funding while citing concerns about its future and its ability to compete with Nvidia in the AI chip market.
Former Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger has gone further on his DeepSeek commentary, saying in a post on LinkedIn that he has purchased shares of Nvidia and other AI-related stocks due to the development. Read more here.
Government leaders face a critical inflection point as AI, edge and supercomputing demands will require planning for AI-ready hardware, according to a new report.