igor_kavinski
Lifer
Honestly, Jensen bought 3dfx so he could use voodoo on Pat and ever since then, whenever Pat is involved even remotely with a GPU effort, he FAILS.
Btw this guy you linked is charging people money to say the name rouge river forest lmaoHonestly, Jensen bought 3dfx so he could use voodoo on Pat and ever since then, whenever Pat is involved even remotely with a GPU effort, he FAILS.
www.semiaccurate.com
I think a better idea would be to comment on this article: https://fortune.com/2024/12/02/intel-ceo-pat-gelsinger-departure-exit/Arrowlake was supposed to launch BEFORE Lunarlake. And predecessor to Arrowlake is Meteorlake. Which means by the time Gelsinger got in, both were in pretty advanced stages. The only thing you can do is to prevent any further delays.
In response, Intel share prices shot up by 5% in premarket trading before slipping again. But that bump may have been the board’s goal,
Gelsinger isn't entirely without faults, but the above quote shows why companies are in such a trouble in the first place - short term thinking.Against this backdrop, Gelsinger lost the board’s confidence. Citing sources close to the situation, Bloomberg reported that directors were frustrated with Gelsinger’s slow progress in chasing Nvidia’s lead. Frank Yeary, an independent chair of the board of Intel, will now serve as interim executive chair.
At least Beretta had many nice things under him like Copy Exactly Fabs were stronger under him he was as you said best case Fab guyGelsinger isn't entirely without faults, but the above quote shows why companies are in such a trouble in the first place - short term thinking.
The Intel Board for example has shown such short sightedness for 2 decades now. Paul Otellini, Brian Kraznich and even Craig Barrett were examples of focusing on stock prices over long-term benefit and execution. Barrett was nowhere near the half psychopath Kraznich, but both had expertise in fabs and I suspected fab guys aren't exactly the best type for CEO roles. Barrett was basically the example of a best case scenario for a fab guy.
Definitely but his expansion of Fabs was too much he would have saved capital by going Only in American Fab and invest rest into productsEngineering companies often need a period of brutal reflection and hardship before they can get the rot out and recover. That is the core and heart of engineering.
The one thing that really made me doubt Gelsinger's plan is that he seemed to have relied on his plan working possibly on the lockdowns being everlasting. If the whole world relies on computers for everything and anything it would have worked.