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#1 Income Generating Computer Business In 2003
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Intel Corporation
American manufacturer of semiconductor computer
circuits. Besides microprocessors, the company makes
microcontrollers (single-chip computers), memory chips, computer
modules and boards, network and conferencing products, and
parallel supercomputers. Its headquarters are in Santa Clara,
Calif.
The company was founded in 1968 by Robert Noyce and Gordon
Moore, who had invented the integrated circuit while working at
Fairchild Semiconductor. They formed their own company, N M
Electronics, in order to manufacture large-scale integrated
(LSI) circuits. The two men were soon joined by Andrew Grove,
who remained the company's head into the mid-1990s. The new
company soon changed its name to Intel (from "integrated
electronics").
The large-scale integrated circuits that Intel began making
late in 1968 were semiconductor memories, which were then 10
times more expensive than magnetic core memories (the industry
standard at the time). The company achieved its first
breakthrough in 1970 with the 1103, a 1-kilobyte dynamic
random-access memory (DRAM) that was the first chip with the
capacity to store a significant amount of information. In 1971
Intel introduced the 4004, a chip containing 2,300 transistors
that was the world's first microprocessor. (A microprocessor is
a chip that contains all the arithmetic, logic, and control
circuitry necessary to perform as the central processing unit of
a computer.) With these products, Intel's semiconductor
chips began to replace magnetic cores as the memories of
computers.
Intel's 8080 (introduced 1974) was an 8-bit microprocessor--i.e.,
it processed information in groups of 8 bits (binary digits) at
a time. The world's first general-purpose microprocessor, the
8080 provided some of the first microcomputers used in cash
registers, automatic teller machines, and a wide range of
consumer products. IBM chose to use Intel's 8088 microprocessor
(introduced 1978) in its first personal computer (the IBM
PC), and because IBM's personal computer design was
widely accepted, the 8088 and subsequent Intel microprocessors
became a standard for all PC-type machines. In the following
years Intel produced a series of faster, more powerful
microprocessors, notably the 16-bit 80286 (introduced 1982), the
32-bit 80386 (introduced 1985), the 80486 (introduced 1989), and
the Pentium processor (introduced 1993), which contained about
3.2 million transistors and could execute more than 100 million
instructions per second. Intel dominated the market for
microprocessors and was the largest maker of semiconductor
circuits in the world.
PC Cyber
Computer - Computer and accessories sales. Complete product
listings, online quote service.
Entre Computer and
Communications - Outsourced computer services to small
businesses including networking, repair, installations, and
training.
Computer &
Communications Innovations Inc. - Hardware, software and
services firm. Includes company history, contact information,
employment opportunities and details on offerings.
Compu-Ease - Computer
and software training for corporate, small business and personal
users. Information on services, employment opportunities.
CSP Computer -
Hardware and system sales.
Technology That Helps -
Small business consulting and support for computer and software
applications.
Physicians Office Computer -
Offers patient financial information, clinical data management
and appointment scheduling software.
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