Wednesday, June 11, 2008

INTEL Time






I had done my internship in this industry giant and leading semiconductor company. Let me tell you the fact "ITS FUN TO BE HERE" Lots and loads of brilliant minds are available and i felt honored to be one among them.I started my internship on 10th April 2k6 and when i entered the campus i just felt like am i in INDIA or somewhere else, Its such beautiful place and INTEL has a very strict rule following about its infrastructure. There we'll be issued worldwide IDs for our recognition in the campus and everywhere for any information regarding every individual.

I joined Mobility group in this company and worked as a physical design engineer for the chipset and was reporting to Avinash thru sekahr palni and my team mates are helping me a lot in coming thru all sort of issues. Whenever one Tapeout happens thats all its party time in INTEL. We used to have lot of fun.

http://www.intel.com/

Intel pushes the boundaries of innovation so our work can make people's lives more exciting, fulfilling, and manageable. And our work never stops. We never stop looking for the next leap ahead—in technology, education, culture, manufacturing, and social responsibility. And we never stop striving to deliver solutions with greater benefits for everyone.

It began with the Intel® microprocessor, the invention that sparked a revolution. Intel's history of developing groundbreaking technology continues today. We attract the most brilliant minds in science to push the boundaries of innovation and further our position as the world's leader in semiconductor technology. Our passion is to create technology that changes the world.

Moore's Law Made real by Intel® innovation

Intel co-founder Gordon Moore is a visionary. In 1965, his prediction, popularly known as Moore's Law, states that the number of transistors on a chip will double about every two years. And Intel has kept that pace for nearly 40 years. Today, we continue to help move the industry forward by delivering:

  • A worldwide silicon fab network with seven high volume fabs and another due to open in 2008
  • The world's first 32nm silicon technology on-target for delivery in 2009
  • The world's first 2-billion transistor microprocessor delivered in next-generation Intel® Itanium® processors codenamed Tukwila
  • Revolutionary technologies on a chip, like hafnium-infused high-k metal gate in production today
  • Advanced research into tri-gate transistors and silicon nanotechnology

Gordon Moore's original graph from 1965

Gordon Moore's original graph from 1965

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