Intel stock has been struggling this year, and executives may be looking to sell a minority stake in Altera to refocus the ...
Using an external MCU as a crude clock source for the Altera CPLD. (Credit: [Doug Brown]) One exciting feature of hardware development involving MCUs and FPGAs is that you all too often need ...
Learn More Altera, a division of Intel that makes programmable chips, unveiled today a number of products that will bring more AI to the edge and the cloud. The products include field programmable ...
Intel is looking for a deal that values Altera at around $17 billion, close to the $16.7 billion it paid in 2015. The move would accelerate previous plans to monetize Altera, which included a ...
[Jose] wanted to develop something awesome with an ARM chip he had lying around, so he built a PDA (Spanish, translation) that can be used as a game console, an oscilloscope, a clock, or a wristwatch.
Intel is reportedly seeking investors to take a minority stake in its Altera programmable chipmaking division. CNBC said Intel is seeking a valuation of about $17 billion for Altera stake.
Two months after Intel spun off the Programmable Solutions Group into a stand-alone FPGA company, it reveals it’s taking its original Altera name and chasing a market opportunity exceeding $55 ...
Altera CEO Sandra Rivera denies a report that Intel is planning to outright sell its programmable chip business. ‘We are executing to the plan, which is not a sale of Altera, but rather it is ...
Furthermore, tech giant Intel has contacted strategic investors and private equity companies regarding potential Altera investments that could potentially generate processors used in data centers ...
Indeed, it feels like every other day a PDA makes headlines – accompanied, of course, by big bold grainy paparazzi photos. Now, a lot of people I’ve spoken to are firmly opposed to the PDA ...