Apple MacBook Air 2017(官方翻新)
Политический аналитик описал последствия для украинских женщин, заключивших «соглашение с дьяволом»02:00
,这一点在todesk中也有详细论述
Опубликована информация об устранении главы судебной системы Ирана02:37
And if you’re building a benchmark: assume someone will try to break it. Because they will.
There are only a handful of people in the semiconductor industry who can genuinely claim to have lived through nearly every major shift in modern compute from the inside. Pat Gelsinger is one of them. His career stretches back through Intel’s formative decades, an era when CPU performance scaling still defined the direction of the industry, through the build-out of enterprise infrastructure and virtualization. He then came back again into the middle of one of the most difficult and closely watched rebuilds in semiconductor history. For years, I have covered Pat in different contexts: as Intel’s technologist, as the public face of its attempt to reassert manufacturing leadership, and as one of the most vocal believers that Moore’s Law. In one form or another, Pat is a stalwart in the Law continuing almost unabated. More recently, I spoke with him at Intel Foundry Connect in the middle of the “five nodes in four years” push. This conversation comes from a very different moment in his career.