Sales of laptop PCs will outpace desktops by 2009, according to
Intel chief
executive Paul Otellini.
New mobile interactive devices, and the technologies and internet access to
support them, will revolutionise the world as we know it, Otellini told the
ninth annual Utah
Technology Council Hall of Fame event last week.
Advances in transistor technology that serve as the basis of all computing
have transformed the world over the past 60 years, Otellini said.
The first transistor in 1947 could be held in the palm of a hand, but 400
transistors can now fit on the surface of a single red blood cell.
"If these same size and price reductions were applied to today's largest
purchases, it would take a microscope to find your house, and the price of a new
car would be less than $.01," said Otellini.
While one billion people currently have access to connected computers, Intel
is working aggressively to support technologies that will connect the second and
the third billion users, and to accomplish this goal on a worldwide scale.
Bernard Daines, father of Fast Ethernet and Gigabit Ethernet, and James LeVoy
Sorenson, medical device pioneer, were inducted into the UTC Hall of Fame at the
event last week.
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