back to article UPHEAVAL as Otellini retires: Will Intel look inside?

Shares in chipmaker Intel were halted before Wall Street opened up for business on Monday as the company announced that its president and CEO, Paul Otellini, 62, will step down from those roles in May of next year. Otellini has been at Intel since 1974, and rose through the ranks to eventually run its PC and then server …

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  1. Mage Silver badge
    Alert

    Who next?

    HP, Apple, Microsoft ...

    Larry Ellison?

  2. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Dumb to halt the stock market

    What "Upheaval"? The guy is retiring in six months. That is not upheaval or anything shocking. If they were reporting that Otellini was finally going to be sent to prison for 25 years along with Bill Gates, for chronic violations of anti-trust laws and criminal fraud, then it would make sense to halt the stock market so everyone could cheer and celebrate justice finally prevailing.

  3. sleepy

    Big challenges

    Despite trying to, Intel hasn't been able to change, because the duopoly with Microsoft has been so strong. But that's changing. The supremacy of X86 is almost over and in the next few years, Intel may have its biggest change since switching from being a memory company to a CPU company. The CPU may finally have become a commodity like memory.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Big challenges

      They screwed up big time with 64-Bit. Producing Itanic and then letting AMD produce the 64-Bit architecture we have today (which is just a bit of a x86 hack job).

      1. twelvebore

        Re: Big challenges

        "They screwed up big time with 64-Bit. Producing Itanic and then letting AMD produce the 64-Bit architecture we have today"

        ... and they've then gone on to crucify AMD with their own instruction set. To the point that certain websites are predicting AMD leaving the parts of x86-space where 64-bit is relevant.

        I've not great love for Intel, but I have to say when they stop messing about and concentrate on pure technological execution, they can really get the job done..

      2. Lars Silver badge
        Coat

        Re: Big challenges

        They lost the memory business to Japan and they will loose the processor business to China. I wish I am wrong, but still the x86 is not a sound architecture and can only be patched. Intel will not have the courage to start anything new. Perhaps this is what it is about.

  4. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Long overdue?

    Who can name two commercial successes Intel have had in the last decade or so, outside the (as already noted) Wintel-dependent market?

    If not two successes, then one?

    If one decade isn't enough, try two.

    Anybody with a clue can name plenty of expensively-promoted Intel failures. IA64, not quite officially dead yet but surely not far off, has already been mentioned. Their integrated graphics are (still?) a long standing joke. Intel's exit from the ARM market was ill-timed.What happened with Intel and WiMax? And although it's perhaps early days yet, wtf did they buy McAfee, WindRiver, and VirtuTech for? And so on.

    x86 isn't just Intel's core, it's all they've really got.

    Times change, eventually. Can Intel change with them?

    1. P. Lee

      Re: Long overdue?

      What other CPU's are there?

      ARM is a success numerically but its profits are rounding errors for intel.

      Intel's issue with ARM similar (though not as advanced) as MS' issue with linux on the tablet/phone. Its a strategic problem of an alternative ecosystem being built, not a problem of immediate sales loss.

      Apart from that, Intel is doing very nicely with x86/64.

  5. Paul Webb
    Childcatcher

    Newlyweds

    Recent divorcees, Sinofsky and Otellini are now free to 'further cement their long-term relationship'.

    Homework: Discuss the terms 'bitter divorce struggle' and 'amicable separation' with regards to Microsoft and Intel.

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