About the partner
Intel Corporation is one of the most foundational and consequential technology companies in the history of computing — the organization whose microprocessors powered the personal computing revolution, established the x86 architecture as the universal standard for general-purpose computation, and made possible the technology-driven economic transformation of the past five decades. Founded in 1968 by Gordon Moore and Robert Noyce — the creators of Moore's Law and the integrated circuit respectively — Intel has spent over fifty years at the frontier of semiconductor design and manufacturing, consistently delivering the computational improvements that the technology industry has relied upon to create its most important products.
Intel's product portfolio spans the full spectrum of modern computing infrastructure. The Core processor family powers the personal computers and laptops used by hundreds of millions of people every day, while the Xeon family serves as the CPU foundation of enterprise servers and cloud data centers worldwide. Intel Optane persistent memory technology, Ethernet and Wi-Fi silicon, FPGAs through the Altera acquisition, and next-generation AI accelerators through the Gaudi family round out a semiconductor business with genuine breadth and depth across every major segment of the computing market. Intel's foundry services ambitions under the IDM 2.0 strategy position the company as a potential key pillar of Western semiconductor manufacturing sovereignty at a time when geopolitical considerations have made chip supply chains a matter of national strategic importance.
Intel's investments in AI silicon through its Gaudi AI accelerator line, its advanced packaging technologies including Foveros and EMIB that enable multi-die processor architectures, and its node roadmap toward Intel 18A represent the company's most important bets on the future of its competitive position in a semiconductor industry that has never been more strategically consequential. With fabrication facilities on both American and European soil, Intel is uniquely positioned to serve customers and governments seeking to reduce their dependence on Asian semiconductor manufacturing. For any organization that depends on computing infrastructure — which is to say, every organization of any kind — Intel's technology is woven into the fabric of the systems that make modern life possible.