TAIPEI, Taiwan, Jan. 24, 2019 /PRNewswire/ -- Cincoze, a professional manufacturer of embedded computing platforms, is pleased to introduce its palm-sized fanless embedded computer DA-1100 series.
Sleek, slim and super-portable, the Compute Card finally busts Intel's chips out of the inside of your PC, and it will ship in August. Claire Reilly was a video host, journalist and producer covering ...
The first Intel Pentium processor was shipped on March 22, 1993, kicking off what would become a core line for the company and a well-regarded brand to the public. The name Pentium came from the Greek ...
Update 8/11/14 5:22 pm ET: Intel today reiterated that fanless Intel Core M-equipped computing devices will be on the market by the time the 2014 holiday season rolls around. At Computex 2014, CPU ...
Dell Precision 370 is based on core architecture to deliver optimal single-or dual performance. The 370 combines new Intel Pentium 4 processors (up to 3.6 GHz) with support for Intel Extended Memory ...
Axiomtek is looking to make industrial computing brighter, or at least more readable, with its new PANEL2127-810 panel computer, which incorporates a 12 inch flat panel LCD monitor. Powered by either ...
The first Intel Compute Cards are coming this fall. Barely bigger than a credit card, the Compute Card is basically the foundation of a modular PC. Under the hood, a Compute Card has a low-power Intel ...
After 15 years, Intel is finally paying out as part of a class action lawsuit that alleged the company made up performance benchmarks for its Pentium 4 processor. Which came out in November 2000. You ...
Intel Corp. introduced a super-compact Pentium computer chip that it says is the fastest processor for notebook computers. According to Intel, many systems based on the 120-MHz Pentium will be able to ...
It may well be that this holiday season’s lump of coal, the Pentium computer chip, will err only once every 27,000 years or will create mathematical headaches solely for those who like their numbers ...
(This article originally appeared in the Mercury News on December 19, 1994.) THOMAS Nicely just couldn’t make the numbers work. On June 13, after running billions of calculations on his Pentium ...
Intel is starting to show what its upcoming Compute Card modules can do. The company has been stuffing PCs into smaller and smaller packages over the past few years, and that’s culminated in a device ...
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