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Once the premier maker of semiconductors and a stalwart of Oregon's "Silicon Forest," Intel is struggling. A breakup is even possible.
Intel has filed documents revealing that the company plans to lay off as many as 5,000 workers in an effort to make the ...
New CEO Lip-Bu Tan told employees this week that he doesn’t consider Intel among the leading chip companies, a bracing message as the chipmaker began expansive layoffs in the face of severe technical ...
Intel is set to lay off 5,000 more workers, including 2,500 in Oregon and 2,000 in California, as it flattens company ...
Intel's recent struggles in the fiercely competitive semiconductor market have reached a critical point, with the company's ...
Intel CEO admits defeat in the AI race, revealing the company is no longer a top 10 semiconductor firm, layoffs continue amid ...
Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan reveals the company's struggles in the semiconductor market, admitting it’s too late to compete with AI ...
Since taking the company's helm in March, CEO Lip-Bu Tan has moved fast to cut costs and find a new path to revive the ailing ...
Intel was once the undisputed king of semiconductors, but it lost its competitive edge. Now, a new CEO is making painful ...
Intel's new CEO Lip-Bu Tan also reportedly told employees it's too late for the company to catch up with Nvidia in the AI GPU ...
Intel's new CEO Lip-Bu Tan considers huge changes to semiconductor business: Intel 18A potential write-off, company to shift focus on 14A process.
Exclusive: Intel's new CEO explores big shift in chip manufacturing business By Max A. Cherney , Jeffrey Dastin and Stephen Nellis July 2, 2025 6:30 PM UTC Updated July 2, 2025 ...