Intel CEO retires as chipmaker loses ground in AI revolution
Intel's CEO is stepping down as the stalwart American chipmaker has struggled to keep pace with the artificial intelligence revolution.
Intel's CEO is stepping down as the stalwart American chipmaker has struggled to keep pace with the artificial intelligence revolution.
The company announced that Pat Gelsinger, who'd led Intel since 2021 and logged more than 30 years in various positions with the chipmaker, had retired from the company effective Sunday.
“While we have made significant progress in regaining manufacturing competitiveness and building the capabilities to be a world-class foundry, we know that we have much more work to do at the company and are committed to restoring investor confidence," Intel's board chair, Frank Yeary, said in a news release.
Intel, once the standard-bearer for American computer chip manufacturing, has struggled to keep up with the turn toward AI computing over the past couple years. Having largely missed out on the smartphone boom of the 2010s, Intel could not afford another misstep by failing to anticipate the next major tech trend.
Yet, it largely has missed the mark — and has suffered disastrous consequences as a result.
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