Kurdistan Workers' Party and Intel: Difference between pages

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{{redirect|Intel}}
{{Refimprove|date=March 2008}}
{{Infobox militant organization
{{Infobox Company
| company_name = Intel Corporation
|name=Kurdistan Workers' Party<br/><small>Partiya Karkerên Kurdistan, (PKK)</small>
| company_logo = [[Image:Intel 4c 100tag.svg|200px]]
|logo=PKK.svg
| company_type = [[Public company|Public]] ({{nasdaq|INTC}}, {{hkex|4335}})
|caption=The current PKK flag used since 2005
| slogan = ''Leap Ahead''
|dates=1978-present
| foundation = 1968 <sup>1</sup>
|leader=The current official leader is [[Murat Karayilan]]. [[Abdullah Öcalan]] (also known as "Apo") was one of the founders and still directs the party from his prison cell, through his lawyer.<ref name=tahiri>Tahiri, Hussein. ''The Structure of Kurdish Society and the Struggle for a Kurdish State.'' Costa Mesa, California: Mazda Publications 2007. pp 232 ff</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.milliyet.com.tr/2007/11/07/siyaset/siy01.html
| location = [[Santa Clara, California]] (incorporated in [[Delaware]]) <br/> {{USA}}
|title=Kenan Evren: 'Kürtçeye ağır yasak koyduk ama hataydı'
| key_people = [[Paul S. Otellini]], CEO <br>[[Craig Barrett (Intel Chairman)|Craig Barrett]], Chairman
|work=[[Milliyet]]
| founders = Gordon E. Moore and Robert Noyce
|date=2007-11-07
| num_employees = 86,300 (2007)<ref name='CNNmoney 2007-10-17'> {{cite web|url=http://money.cnn.com/quote/snapshot/snapshot.html?symb=INTC |title=Intel Corporation - company profile |accessdate=2007-10-17 |work=[[CNN]] |publisher=[[Time Warner]]}}</ref>
|accessdate=2008-07-30
| industry = [[Semiconductors]]
|first=Fikret
| products = [[Microprocessor]]s<br>[[Flash memory]]<br>[[Motherboard]] [[Chipsets]]<br>[[Network Interface Card]]<br>[[Bluetooth]] [[Chipsets]]
|last=Bila
| revenue = {{gain}} $38.3 billion [[United States dollar|USD]] (2007)<ref>
|language=Turkish
{{cite web
|quote=Şimdi İmralı'dan PKK'yı yönetiyor. Cezaevinden avukatları kanalıyla.
|url=http://www.edn.com/article/CA6424781.html
}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|work=BBC|accessdate=2007-09-01|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/535312.stm|title=Ocalan: Which way now?|date=2000-11-21}}</ref>
|title=AMD wins 2006 revenue battle with Intel, iSuppli says
|motives=The creation of an independent [[socialist]] state of ''[[Kurdistan]]'' in parts of present [[Turkey]], [[Iran]], [[Iraq]] and [[Syria]]. Cultural and political rights for the Kurdish population in [[Turkey]].<ref>{{cite news|work=Guardian|accessdate=2008-08-01|url= http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,3604,1482808,00.html|title=Radical firebrand who led bloody nationalist war| date=2005-05-13|first=Michael|last=Howard}}</ref>
|accessdate=2007-11-05
|area=[[Turkey]], [[Iraq]], [[Iran]] and [[Syria]]
}}</ref><ref>
|ideology= [[Kurdish nationalism]]
{{cite web
|strength= As high as 90,000 in the early 1990's, an estimated 3,000 in the fall of 2007<ref>{{cite news
|url=http://www.informationweek.com/news/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=198001312
|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7033075.stm
|title=Chipmaker Report: Intel's Revenue Sank In 2006
|accessdate=2008-07-23
|accessdate=2007-11-05
|work=BBC News
}}</ref>
|date=2008-07-23
| operating_income = {{gain}} $8.2 billion [[United States dollar|USD]] (2007) |
|date=2007-10-07
net_income = {{gain}} $7.0 billion [[United States dollar|USD]] (2007) |
|title=Turkish soldiers killed by rebels
homepage = [http://www.intel.com/ intel.com]
}}</ref><ref>{{cite web
| footnotes = '''<sup>1</sup>'''<small>[[Incorporation (business)|Incorporated]] in [[California]] in 1968, reincorporated in Delaware in 1989.<ref name='SEC-filing'> {{cite web|url=http://secfilings.nasdaq.com/edgar_conv_html%2f2006%2f02%2f27%2f0000891618-06-000089.html#FIS_BUSINESS |title=INTEL CORP (Form: 10-K, Received: 02/27/2006 06:02:42) |accessdate=2007-07-05 |date=2005-12-31 |work=[[United States Securities and Exchange Commission]] }}</ref></small>
|url=http://www.globalsecurity.org/intell/library/reports/crs/Cterror2.htm
|title=Terrorism: Middle Eastern Groups and State Sponsors, 1998 August 27,
|work=GlobalSecurity.org information, directed by John Pike
|accessdate=2008-07-23
|date=1998-08-27
|first=Kenneth
|last=Katzman
}}</ref>
|status=Designated as [[U.S. State Department list of Foreign Terrorist Organizations|Foreign Terrorist Organization]] by the [[United States Department of State|US State Department]]<ref name="USTerrorList">{{cite web|url= http://www.state.gov/s/ct/rls/fs/2002/12535.htm|title=Foreign Terrorist Organizations List|publisher=[[United States Department of State]]| date=2002-10-23| accessdate=2008-02-23}} - [[U.S. State Department list of Foreign Terrorist Organizations|USSD Foreign Terrorist Organization]]</ref><ref name="USTerrorList2">{{cite web| url=http://www.state.gov/s/ct/rls/crt/2006/82738.htm| work=Country Reports on Terrorism|title=Chapter 6—Terrorist Groups| date=2005-04-27| publisher=[[United States Department of State]]
<!--use in case of emergency | archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20050526080545/http://www.state.gov/s/ct/rls/45394.htm| archivedate=2005-05-26 --> | accessdate=2008-07-23}}</ref><br/>Designated as [[Terrorism Act 2000|Proscribed Group]] by the [[United Kingdom|UK]] [[Home Office]]{{Fact|date=February 2008}}<br/>Designated as terrorist group by [[European Union|EU]] [[Common Foreign and Security Policy]].{{Fact|date=February 2008}}
|crimes=[[Assassination]], [[Bombing Attack|Bombing Attacks]], [[Chemical Warfare]], [[Illegal Drug Trade|Drug Trafficking]], [[Extortion]], [[Human Trafficking]], [[Kidnapping]], [[Sabotage]], [[Suicide Bombing|Suicide Bombings]]<ref name="NewInternationalTerrorism"/><ref name="PKKextortion US DOS" /><ref name="PKK US Embassy, Turkey" /><ref>{{cite news
|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/4690181.stm
|accessdate=2008-06-29
|title=PKK 'behind' Turkey resort bomb
|date=2008-06-29
|work=BBC News
|date=2005-07-17
}}</ref>
|size=6000<ref name=hurriyet9914612/>
}}
}}
'''Intel Corporation''' ({{nasdaq|INTC}}; {{hkex|4335}}) is the world's largest [[semiconductor]] company and the inventor of the [[X86 architecture|x86]] series of microprocessors, the processors found in most [[personal computers]]. Founded on [[July 18]], 1968 as '''Int'''egrated '''El'''ectronics Corporation and based in [[Santa Clara, California]], [[United States|USA]], Intel also makes [[motherboard]] chipsets, [[network card]]s and [[Integrated circuit|IC]]s, [[flash memory]], graphic chips, embedded processors, and other devices related to communications and computing. Founded by semiconductor pioneers [[Robert Noyce]] and [[Gordon Moore]], and widely associated with the executive leadership and vision of [[Andrew Grove]], Intel combines advanced chip design capability with a leading-edge manufacturing capability. Originally known primarily to engineers and technologists, Intel's successful "Intel Inside" advertising campaign of the 1990s made it and its [[Pentium]] processor household names.
The '''Kurdistan Workers' Party''' ({{lang-ku|Partiya Karkerên Kurdistan}} or '''PKK''', also called '''KADEK''', '''Kongra-Gel''', and '''KGK'''<ref name="USTerrorList2"/>) is a [[militant]] <!-- Please do not write terrorist here, per Wikipedia policies. However, you may cite the countries that recognize it as such in the above infobox. --> organization founded in the 1970s and led by [[Abdullah Öcalan]]. The PKK's ideology is founded on revolutionary [[Marxism-Leninism]] and [[Kurdish nationalism]]. The PKK's goal has been to create an [[Independence|independent]], [[Socialism|socialist]] Kurdish state in [[Kurdistan]]; a geographical region that comprises parts of southeastern [[Turkey]], northeastern [[Iraq]], northeastern [[Syria]] and northwestern [[Iran]], where the Kurdish population is the majority. This goal has now been moderated to claiming [[Human rights of Kurdish people in Turkey|cultural and political rights for the Kurdish population within the state of Turkey]].<ref name=tahiri/>


Intel was an early developer of [[Static random access memory|SRAM]] and [[Dynamic random access memory|DRAM]] memory chips, and this represented the majority of its business until the early 1980s. While Intel created the first commercial microprocessor chip in 1971, it was not until the success of the [[personal computer]] (PC) that this became their primary business. During the 1990s, Intel invested heavily in new microprocessor designs and in fostering the rapid growth of the PC industry. During this period Intel became the [[Market dominance|dominant]] supplier of microprocessors for PCs, and was known for aggressive and sometimes controversial tactics in defense of its market position, as well as a struggle with [[Microsoft]] for control over the direction of the PC industry.<ref name='CNET 1998-09-23'>{{cite news |first=Dan |last=Goodin |coauthors= |title=Microsoft's holy war on Java |date=[[1998-09-23]] |publisher=CNET News.com |url=http://www.news.com/2009-1001-215854.html |work=news.com |pages= |accessdate=2008-01-07 |language=}}</ref><ref name='BBC 1998-12-14'>{{cite news |first=Lea |last=Graham |coauthors= |title=USA versus Microsoft: the fourth week |date=[[1998-12-14]] |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/special_report/1998/04/98/microsoft/215645.stm |work=[[BBC News]] |pages= |accessdate=2008-01-07 |language=}}</ref>
The PKK has fairly wide support among the Kurdish population in Turkey, and limited support in other parts of Kurdistan.<ref>{{cite news|work=[[BBC News]]|accessdate=|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7044760.stm|title=Profile: PKK rebel group|date=2007-10-15}}</ref><ref>Tahiri, Hussein. ''The Structure of Kurdish Society and the Struggle for a Kurdish state''. Costa mesa 2007, Mazda Publishers, chapters 7 & 8</ref> It is listed as a [[terrorism|terrorist]] organization internationally by [[List of countries and organizations that list the PKK as a terrorist group|a number of states and organizations]], including the [[United States]],<ref name="USTerrorList2"/> [[NATO]] and the [[European Union]].<ref name=csm /> The organisation is listed as one of the 12 active terrorist organisation in Turkey as of 2007 according to the Counter-Terrorism and Operations Department of Directorate General for Security ([[Law_enforcement_in_Turkey|Turkish police]]).<ref>[http://www.egm.gov.tr/temuh/terorgrup1.html Türkiye'de Halen Faaliyetlerine Devam Eden Baslica Terör Örgütleri] {{tr icon}}</ref> Turkey labeled the organization as an [[Ethnic nationalism|ethnic]] [[secession]]ist organization that uses terrorism and the threat of force against both civilian<ref name=csm>{{cite news|title=Turkish Kurds: some back the state|work=[[Christian Science Monitor]]|date=2007-07-06|url=http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0706/p06s02-wosc.html}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title=PKK baskınına uğrayan Kürt köyleri ABD gazetesine haber oldu|language=Turkish|work=[[Milliyet]]|date=2007-07-07|url=http://www.milliyet.com.tr/2007/07/07/son/sondun06.asp}}</ref> and military targets for the purpose of achieving its political goal.
The 2007 rankings of the world's 100 most powerful brands published by [[Millward Brown|Millward Brown Optimor]] showed the company's brand value falling 10 places – from number 15 to number 25.<ref name='Brandz 2007'> {{cite web|url=http://www.millwardbrown.com/Sites/optimor/Content/KnowledgeCenter/BrandzRanking2007.aspx |title=Brandz Ranking 2007 |accessdate=2007-07-28 |date=2007 |publisher=[[Millward Brown|Millward Brown Optimor]] }}</ref>


In addition to its work in semiconductors, Intel has begun research in electrical transmission and generation.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20080821/ts_afp/usitinternetenergychipcompanyintel|title=Intel cuts electric cords with wireless power system|last=AFP|date=2008-08-21|publisher=Yahoo! News|accessdate=2008-08-22}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/08/21/technology/21intel.php|title=Intel moves to free gadgets of their recharging cords|last=Markoff|first=John|date=2008-08-21|work=[[International Herald Tribune]]|publisher=[[The New York Times Company]]|accessdate=2008-08-22}}</ref>
== Name ==
The group most commonly referred to as the PKK despite among the organization's self declared name changes, names used by its branches, and vassal structures established. For the purposes of convenience in this article we refer to the group as the organization.


== Corporate history ==
The organization introduced to the intelligence community as "Apocus" in the late 1979 more than a year after it's establishment in 1978 from ex-members of existing leftish groups.
[[Image:Intelheadquarters.jpg|thumb|Intel headquarters in Santa Clara]]


Intel was founded in 1968 by [[Gordon E. Moore]] (a [[chemist]] and [[physicist]]) and [[Robert Noyce]] (a physicist and co-inventor of the [[integrated circuit]]) when they left [[Fairchild Semiconductor]]. A number of other Fairchild employees also went on to participate in other [[Silicon Valley]] companies. Intel's third employee was [[Andrew Grove|Andy Grove]],<ref>The [[Andrew Grove]] article explains how a clerical error exchanged the employee ID numbers of Grove and the fourth employee, [[Leslie L. Vadász]], whom Grove had hired.</ref> (a [[chemical engineer]]), who ran the company through much of the 1980s and the high-growth 1990s. Grove is now remembered as the company's key [[business]] and [[strategy|strategic]] [[leader]]. By the end of the 1990s, Intel was one of the largest and most successful businesses in the world.{{Fact|date=September 2007 |Some statistics needed|date=September 2007}}
During more than three decades of existence, organization declared name changes without changing its [[organizational structure]], such as Kurdistan Workers' Party (Partiya Karkeran Kurdistan, PKK); Freedom and Democracy Congress of Kurdistan (KADEK); Kurdish Freedom Hawks (TAK); Halu Mesru Savunma Kuvveti (HSK). Organization adapted a decentralized structure to help the growing effectiveness<ref>Joost Jongerden, PKK, CEU Political Science Journal. Vol. 3, No. 1 page 128</ref> and these new branches adapted different names. Armed wing active in south-east Turkey used HPG (People's Forces of Defence) and another armed force was the People's Defense Force. The organization held especially by a vassal or tenant to the major control over established structures such as Kurdistan Freedom and Democracy Congress; Kurdistan People's Congress (KHK); People's Congress of Kurdistan. As of April 30, 2007, all the social arrangements, all the activities declared, using the listed names are classified as originated from the same organization (commonly known as PKK) by the [[Office of the Coordinator for Counterterrorism]] of [[USA]] as published in [[Country Reports on Terrorism]].<ref name="USTerrorList2"/>


===Origin of the name===
Also the Youth Council of Kurdistan (YCK), an establishment of the organization initially created on October 25 1987, aim to organise and recruit the youth more systematically, extended to branches; Free Youth Movement of Kurdistan (TECAK), The Independent Youth Movement in Turkey (BAGEH), Democratic Youth Movement in Iran, Independent Youth Movement in Iraq (TCM), Free Youth Movement in Syria (TCA), The Free Youth Movement (ÖGH) in Europe and in the Commonwealth of Independent State.<ref> Necati Alkan "Youth and Terrorism: Example of PKK", NATO, HSD. EAP. ARW 982906 International Workshop on POLITICAL VIOLENCE, ORGANIZED CRIME, TERRORISM & YOUTH, September 2007, page 8</ref>
At its founding, Gordon Moore and Robert Noyce wanted to name their new company "Moore Noyce". The name, however, sounded remarkably similar to "more noise" &mdash; an ill-suited name for an [[electronics]] company, since noise is typically associated with bad [[interference]]. They then used the name NM Electronics for almost a year, before deciding to call their company '''INT'''egrated '''EL'''ectronics or "Intel" for short. However, Intel was already trademarked by a [[hotel]] chain, so they had to buy the rights for that name at the beginning.<ref>{{web cite |url=http://www.theinquirer.net/default.aspx?article=42469 |title=Secret of Intel name revealed |publisher=The Inquirer |author=Theo Valich |date=2007-09-19 |accessdate=2007-09-19}}</ref>


===Company's evolution===
== Ideology ==
Intel has grown through several distinct phases. At its founding, Intel was distinguished simply by its ability to make [[semiconductor]]s, and its primary products were [[static random access memory]] (SRAM) chips. Intel's business grew during the 1970s as it expanded and improved its manufacturing processes and produced a wider range of products, still dominated by various memory devices.
[[Image:Kurdistan Workers Party flag (former).gif|thumb|Former flag displaying the [[communist]] [[hammer and sickle]]]]
The organization originated in the 1970s from the radical left in Turkey and drew its leaders, members from other existing leftish groups, mainly Dev-Genç.<ref name="Joost127">Joost Jongerden, PKK, CEU Political Science Journal. Vol. 3, No. 1 page 127</ref>.


While Intel created the [[Intel 4004|first microprocessor (Intel 4004)]] in 1971 and one of the first [[microcomputer]]s in 1972,<ref name='Intellec-1973'> {{cite web|url=http://www.old-computers.com/MUSEUM/computer.asp?c=754&st=1 |title=Intel Intellec Series |accessdate=2007-07-31 |last=Silberhorn |first=Gottfried |coauthors=Colin Douglas Howell |work=old-computers.com |publisher=OLD-COMPUTERS.COM }}</ref><ref name='Intel-Product-Timeline'> {{cite web|url=http://download.intel.com/museum/research/arc_collect/timeline/TimelineDateSort7_05.pdf |title=A chronological list of Intel products. The products are sorted by date. |accessdate=2007-07-31 |date=2005-07 |format=PDF |work=Intel museum |publisher=Intel Corporation }}</ref> by the early 1980s its business was dominated by [[dynamic random access memory]] chips. However, increased competition from [[Japan]]ese semiconductor manufacturers had by 1983 dramatically reduced the profitability of this market, and the sudden success of the [[IBM]] [[personal computer]] convinced then-CEO Grove to shift the company's focus to microprocessors, and to change fundamental aspects of that business model. By the end of the 1980s this decision had proven successful, and Intel embarked on a 10-year period of unprecedented growth as the primary (and most profitable) hardware supplier to the PC industry.
During 1980's, the organization was a secular insurgent political movement.<ref name="Joost127"/> During 1980's the organization included and cooperated with other ethnic groups (including ethnic Turks) who were following the radical left. Following the collapse of the USSR, the PKK largely abandoned its communist roots, attempting to better accommodate nationalistic views and Islamic beliefs.


After 2000, growth in demand for high-end microprocessors slowed and competitors garnered significant market share, initially in low-end and mid-range processors but ultimately across the product range, and Intel's dominant position was reduced. In the early 2000s then-CEO Craig Barrett attempted to diversify the company's business beyond semiconductors, but few of these activities were ultimately successful.
The organization emerged from the Workers Party of "Kurdistan" heritage. With the time fundamentally transforming from a party of Kurdistan to a party of Turkey<ref name="Joost129"/>. The profound shift implied a recognition of national sovereignty of "Republic of Turkey" (within which the claim is made for regional autonomy), rather than a fight for national independence.<ref name="Joost129">Joost Jongerden, PKK, CEU Political Science Journal. Vol. 3, No. 1 page 129</ref>. This positional change was criticized as a method change rather than a real ideological change.


In 2005, CEO Paul Otellini reorganized the company to refocus its core processor and chipset business on platforms (enterprise, digital home, digital health, and mobility) which led to the hiring of over 20,000 new employees. In September 2006 due to falling profits, the company announced a restructuring that resulted in layoffs of 10,500 employees or about 10 percent of its workforce by July 2006. Its research lab located at Cambridge University was closed at the end of 2006.
In 1999, following the capture of Ocalan, organization announced a "peace initiative," and spoken more often about cultural or linguistic rights<ref name="USTerrorList2"/>. The group's hard-line militant wing took control and renounced the self-imposed cease-fire with the turn of 2004.<ref name="USTerrorList2"/> During this period on 17 July 2005, one of the chief executive of the PKK, [[Hasan Özen]] who wanted to leave the organization, was murdered in Austria. In Diyarbakir, on 6 July 2005, the organization killed [[Hikmet Fidan]] the former founder of the People’s Democratic Party (HADEP), a legal branch of the PKK, after he split from the PKK and formed an alternative organization called PWD with Osman Ocalan.


===Sale of XScale processor business===
Currently, it is labeled as an [[Ethnic nationalism|ethnic]] [[secession]]ist organization that uses terrorism and the threat of force against both civilian and military targets for the purpose of achieving its political goal.
On June 27, 2006, the sale of Intel's [[XScale]] assets was announced. Intel agreed to sell the XScale processor business to [[Marvell Technology Group]] for an estimated $600 million in cash and the assumption of unspecified liabilities. The move is intended to permit Intel to focus its resources on its core x86 and server businesses. The [[Mergers and acquisitions|acquisition]] was completed on November 9, 2006.<ref name='XScale'>{{cite news |first= |last= |coauthors= |title=Marvell buys Intel's handheld processor unit for $600 million |date=[[2006-06-27]] |publisher=CMP Media LLC. |url=http://www.eetimes.com/news/latest/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=189601851 |work=eetimes.com |pages= |accessdate=2007-07-12 |language=}}</ref>


==History==
==Market history==
===SRAMS and the microprocessor===
[[Image:Pkk supporters london april 2003.jpg|thumb|300px|[[February 15, 2003 anti-war protest|February 15, 2003, PKK supporters at the anti-war protest]] for the imminent [[2003 invasion of Iraq|invasion of Iraq]] in [[London]] [http://gallery.thinkgeek.co.uk/london_anti_war_2003]]
<!-- Commented out because image was deleted: [[Image:L Intel-C4004 (gray traces).jpg|thumb|right|160px|Intel C4004, the world's first single-chip microprocessor. The "gold and white with gray traces" specimen shown belongs to the initial [[CERDIP]] type series manufactured in 1971.]]-->
[[Image:Anti-PKK demonstration in Kadiköy.jpg|thumb|300px|right|[[October 22]] [[2007]], demonstration against the PKK in [[Kadıköy]], [[Istanbul]].]]
The company's first products were [[shift register]] memory and random-access [[Primary storage|memory]] integrated circuits, and Intel grew to be a leader in the fiercely competitive [[Dynamic random access memory|DRAM]], [[Static random access memory|SRAM]], and [[Read-only memory|ROM]] markets throughout the 1970s. Concurrently, Intel engineers [[Marcian Hoff]], [[Federico Faggin]], Stanley Mazor and [[Masatoshi Shima]] invented the first [[microprocessor]]. Originally developed for the Japanese company [[Busicom]] to replace a number of [[Application-specific integrated circuit|ASIC]]s in a calculator already produced by Busicom, the [[Intel 4004]] was introduced to the mass market on [[November 15]], [[1971]], though the microprocessor did not become the core of Intel's business until the mid-1980s. (Note: Intel is usually given credit with [[Texas Instruments]] for the almost-simultaneous invention of the microprocessor.)
{{Main|History of the Kurdistan Workers Party}}
In the early 1970s, the organization's core was called the ''Ankara Democratic Patriotic Association of Higher Education'' or ''Apocular'' ("Apoists"), which was made up largely of students, led by [[Abdullah Öcalan]] (nicknamed "Apo") in [[Ankara]]. The group soon moved its focus to large Kurdish population in south-east Turkey.


===From DRAM to microprocessors===
On 27 October, 1978, the group adapted the name Kurdistan Workers Party with the official release of the "Proclamation of Independence of PKK." The organization soon found itself in [[Right-wing and left-wing armed conflicts (Republic of Turkey)|conflict with right-wing entities]] with its largely communist ideology. In 1979, organization attempted to assassinate Kurdish tribal leader [[Mehmet Celal Bucak]] as a [[propaganda-of-the-deed]] claiming "exploiting the peasants," and "collaborating with Turkey." This marked a period of intense [[History of the Kurdistan Workers Party#Urban War (1978-1980)|urban warfare]] between radical political elements. The [[History of the Kurdistan Workers Party#Syria .281980-1984.29|military coup]] largely ended this period, with members of the organization being subject to capital punishment, going to prison, or fleeing to [[Syria]]. On [[November 10]], [[1980]], the Turkish Consulate in [[Strasbourg]], [[France]] was bombed resulting a significant material damage but no injuries and operation claimed jointly by the [[ASALA]] and the organization, which they claimed to be the start of a "fruitful collaboration."<ref name="miptpkkasala">{{cite web|url=http://www.tkb.org/Incident.jsp?incID=2735|author=MIPT Terrorism Knowledge Base|title=Incident Profile: Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia (ASALA) and Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) attacked Diplomatic target (November 10, 1980, France)|accessdate=2007-04-17}}</ref>
In 1983, at the dawn of the [[personal computer]] era, Intel's profits came under increased pressure from [[Japan]]ese memory-chip manufacturers, and then-President Andy Grove drove the company into a focus on microprocessors. Grove described this transition in the book ''[[Only the Paranoid Survive]]''. A key element of his plan was the notion, then considered radical, of becoming the single source for successors to the popular [[Intel 8086|8086]] microprocessor.


Until then, manufacture of complex integrated circuits was not reliable enough for customers to depend on a single supplier, but Grove began producing processors in three geographically distinct factories, and ceased licensing the chip designs to competitors such as [[Zilog]] and [[AMD]]. When the PC industry boomed in the late 1980s and 1990s, Intel was one of the primary beneficiaries.
Starting in 1984, using the training camps located in Syria, the organization transformed itself into a paramilitary organisation and launched conventional attacks as well as continuing with the [[bombing]]s against governmental installations, military and civilian targets, many of whom were connected to the [[Southeastern Anatolia Project]] (GAP), a multi-sector integrated regional development project based on the concept of sustainable development for more than nine million people living in the [[Southeastern Anatolia Region, Turkey|southeastern Anatolia]] region. During 1990s, the organization moved to a less centralized form, taking up operations in a variety of European and Middle Eastern countries and became a trans-nationalized organization. Following the collapse of the [[Soviet Union|USSR]], the PKK largely abandoned its communist roots, attempting to better accommodate nationalistic views and Islamic beliefs. In the mid 1990s, it also began to shift from conventional bombing to [[suicide bombing]], launching 15 such attacks between 1995 and 1999. The 11 of 15 suicide bombers were women.


===Intel, x86 processors, and the IBM PC===
In the late 1990s, the Turkish army began to gain the upper hand in its ground war with the organization and post-[[Cold War]] shifts in international politics resulted in the group losing much of its support among other states. In 1999, [[History of the Kurdistan Workers Party#Capture of .C3.96calan .281999.29|Öcalan was captured]], prosecuted and sentenced to death. Turkey abolished the [[death penalty]] on [[3 August]] [[2002]] as part of a raft of reforms aimed at preparing the country for European Union membership, and Öcalan was commuted to life imprisonment.<ref>UNESCO. 2002. "[http://portal.unesco.org/es/ev.php-URL_ID=6606&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html Death penalty abolished in Turkey]". The new Courier n°1.</ref> Öcalan took his case to the [[European Court of Human Rights]] which conclusion held that there had been violation of Article 6 (right to fair trial), as there was one military judge among six judges trying Abdullah Öcalan, there was no violation of Article 2 (right to life).<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.echr.coe.int/eng/Press/2003/march/Ocalanjudgeng.htm|title=Chamber Judgment In The Case Of Öcalan v. Turkey| accessdate=2007-10-22 |date= March 2003|publisher=[[European Court of Human Rights]]|archiveurl= http://web.archive.org/web/20050210224238/http://www.echr.coe.int/eng/Press/2003/march/Ocalanjudgeng.htm|archivedate=2005-02-10}}</ref> With downgraded security concerns, the Turkish parliament began a controlled process of dismantling the legal control, using the term "normalization" or "rapprochement" depending on the sides of the issue. A ban on publishing using Kurdish language (1983) was dropped in 1991, with more thorough reforms, such as the lifting of the ban on broadcasting in Kurdish, adopted in the 2000s with the decrease in PKK's activities.<ref name=Ibrahim2000>{{cite book
[[Image:153056995 5ef8b01016 o.jpg|right|thumb|230px|The [[integrated circuit]] from an [[Intel 8742]], an 8-bit microcontroller that includes a [[CPU]] running at 12 MHz, 128 bytes of [[RAM]], 2048 bytes of [[EPROM]], and [[Input/output|I/O]] in the same chip.]]
| author = Ferhad Ibrahim, Gülistan Gürbey
Despite the ultimate importance of the microprocessor, the 4004 and its successors the 8008 and the 8080 were never major revenue contributors at Intel. As the next processor, the 8086 (and its variant the 8088) was completed in 1978, Intel embarked on a major marketing and sales campaign for that chip nicknamed "Operation Crush", and intended to win as many customers for the processor as possible. One design win was the newly-created [[IBM PC]] division, though the importance of this was not fully realized at the time.
| year = 2000

| isbn = 0312236298
IBM introduced its personal computer in 1981, and it was rapidly successful. In 1982, Intel created the [[80286]] microprocessor, which, two years later, was used in the IBM PC/AT. [[Compaq]], the first IBM PC "clone" manufacturer, in 1985 produced a desktop system based on the faster [[80286]] processor and in 1986 quickly followed with the first [[80386]]-based system, beating IBM and establishing a competitive market for PC-compatible systems and setting up Intel as a key component supplier.
| title = The Kurdish Conflict in Turkey: Obstacles and Chances for Peace and Democracy

In 1975 the company had started a project to develop a highly-advanced 32-bit microprocessor, finally released in 1981 as the [[Intel iAPX 432]]. The project was too ambitious and the processor was never able to meet its performance objectives, and it failed in the marketplace. Intel extended the x86 architecture to 32 bits instead.<ref>{{cite web
|last=Maliniak
|first=Lisa
|title=Ten Notable Flops: Learning From Mistakes
|work=Electronic Design Online
|date=October 21, 2002
|url=http://electronicdesign.com/Articles/Index.cfm?AD=1&ArticleID=2839
|accessdate=2007-11-27
}}</ref><ref>{{cite web
|last=Dvorak
|first=John C.
|authorlink=John C. Dvorak
|title=What Ever Happened to... Intel's Dream Chip?
|work=
|date=February 1997
|url=http://www.brouhaha.com/~eric/retrocomputing/intel/iapx432/dreamchip.html
|accessdate= 2007-11-27
}}</ref>
}}</ref>


====386 microprocessor====
Following a call by the captured Öcalan for a peaceful solution, the PKK found itself blacklisted in many countries. Consequently, the PKK went through a series of changes and implemented a unilateral truce, which ended in 2003.<ref>{{cite news|work=BBC|accessdate=2007-09-01|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/3200907.stm|title=Kurdish rebels abandon truce|date=2003-09-02}}</ref> On [[April 2]], [[2004]], the [[Council of the European Union]] added the PKK to its list of terrorist organisations. Later that year, the [[United States Department of the Treasury|US Treasury]] moved to freeze assets of branches of the PKK.
During this period [[Andrew Grove|Andy Grove]] dramatically redirected the company, closing much of its [[DRAM]] business and directing resources to the [[microprocessor]] business. Of perhaps greater importance was his decision to "single-source" the 386 microprocessor. Prior to this, microprocessor manufacturing was in its infancy, and manufacturing problems frequently reduced or stopped production, interrupting supplies to customers. To mitigate this risk, these customers typically insisted that multiple manufacturers produce chips they could use to ensure a consistent supply. The 8080 and 8086-series microprocessors were produced by several companies, notably [[Zilog]] and [[AMD]]. Grove made the decision not to license the 386 design to other manufacturers, instead producing it in three geographically distinct factories in [[Santa Clara, California|Santa Clara]], CA; [[Hillsboro, Oregon|Hillsboro]], OR; and the [[Phoenix, Arizona|Phoenix]], [[Arizona]] suburb of [[Chandler, Arizona|Chandler]]; and convincing customers that this would ensure consistent delivery. As the success of Compaq's Deskpro 386 established the 386 as the dominant CPU choice, Intel achieved a position of near-exclusive dominance as its supplier. Profits from this funded rapid development of both higher-performance chip designs and higher-performance manufacturing capabilities, propelling Intel to a position of unquestioned leadership by the early 1990s.


====486, Pentium, and Itanium====
Since [[Post-invasion Iraq, 2003–present]], according to Turkey, [[Massoud Barzani]], leader of the Kurdish region in northern Iraq, and US forces have not done enough to combat with the organization and secure the Iraqi-Turkish border, causing tensions between the Iraqi and Turkish governments.<ref>{{cite web | title = Consul General's Speech on U.S.-Turkish Relations|date=2006-05-23| url=http://istanbul.usconsulate.gov/cg_speech_0523.html | accessdate = 2008-02-22 | year = 2008 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web | title = Ralston_091906 | url=http://istanbul.usconsulate.gov/ralston_091906.html | accessdate = 2008-02-22 | year = 2008 }}</ref> On the [[17 October]] [[2007]], the Turkish parliament approved a military incursion into Iraq to pursue the PKK fighters. The vote for incursion won with an overwhelming 507 to 19.<ref>{{cite news|title=Turkey approves Iraq incursion|work=[[CNN]]| date=2007-10-17|url=http://www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/meast/10/17/turkey.iraq/index.html}}</ref> Action was delayed on request by the US government on the condition that "swift steps" were taken to deal with the militants. On December 16th, 2007, after the [[October 2007 clashes in Hakkari]] the Turkish Armed Forces started preparations for [[2008 Turkish incursion into northern Iraq]].
<!-- Commented out because image was deleted: [[Image:Intel4.jpg|thumb|Intel Pentium 4 Processor]] -->


Intel introduced the [[Intel 80486|486]] microprocessor in 1989, and in 1990 formally established a second design team, designing the processors code-named "P5" and "P6" in parallel and committing to a major new processor every two years, versus the four or more years such designs had previously taken. The P5 was earlier known as "Operation Bicycle" referring to the cycles of the processor. The P5 was introduced in 1993 as the Intel [[Pentium]], substituting a trademarked name for the former part number (numbers, like 486, cannot be trademarked). The P6 followed in 1995 as the [[Pentium Pro]] and improved into the [[Pentium II]] in 1997. New architectures were developed alternately in [[Santa Clara, California]] and [[Hillsboro, Oregon]].
===2008 to date===
On [[22 February]] [[2008]], the Turkish military carried out a major incursion into northern Iraq to attack PKK bases there. An estimated 10,000 Turkish troops were deployed for the incursion along with armoured vehicles and aircraft.<ref>{{cite news | title=Turkey launches major Iraq incursion|work=[[CNN]]|url=http://edition.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/meast/02/22/turkey.iraq/index.html}}</ref>
The incursion sparked calls from the Iraqi and US governments for the incursion to end.


The Santa Clara design team embarked in 1993 on a successor to the x86 architecture, codenamed "P7". The first attempt was dropped a year later, but quickly revived in a cooperative program with [[Hewlett-Packard]] engineers, though Intel soon took over primary design responsibility. The resulting implementation of the [[Itanium|IA-64]] 64-bit architecture was the [[Itanium]], finally introduced in June 2001. The Itanium's performance running legacy x86 code did not achieve expectations, and it failed to effectively compete with 64-bit extensions to the original x86 architecture, first from AMD (the [[AMD64]]), then from Intel itself (the [[Intel 64]] architecture, formerly known as EM64T). As of November 2007, Intel continues to develop and deploy the Itanium.
On [[29 February]], [[2008]] the Turkish military announced that the incursion was finished and pulled out of northern Iraq, claiming that they had achieved their objectives. The military claimed 240 PKK rebels killed and for the loss of 27 Turkish soldiers.<ref>{{cite news | title=Iraqi incursion finished, Turkey says|work=[[CNN]]|url=http://edition.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/meast/02/29/iraq.main/index.html}}</ref>


The Hillsboro team designed the [[Pentium 4#Willamette|Willamette]] processor (code-named P67 and P68) which was marketed as the Pentium 4, and later developed the 64-bit extensions to the x86 architecture, present in some versions of the Pentium 4 and in the [[Intel Core 2]] chips. Many chip variants were developed at an office in [[Haifa, Israel]].
After a terrorist attack in Istanbul on [[27 July]] [[2008]], Turkish authorities blamed the PKK. Spokesmen for the organization emphatically denied being involved.


====Pentium flaw====
On [[7 August]] [[2008]] the PKK claimed responsibility for an explosion that has halted the flow of oil through the [[Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline]].<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/c4836dca-64e1-11dd-af61-0000779fd18c.html?nclick_check=1
{{main|Pentium FDIV bug}}
|accessdate=2008-09-15
In June 1994, Intel engineers discovered a flaw in the [[floating-point]] math subsection of the [[Pentium]] [[microprocessor]]. Under certain data dependent conditions, low order bits of the result of floating-point division operations would be incorrect, an error that can quickly compound in floating-point operations to much larger errors in subsequent calculations. Intel corrected the error in a future chip revision, but nonetheless declined to disclose it.{{Fact|date=July 2007}}
|title=Kurds lay claim to blast on Azeri oil pipeline
|work=[[Financial Times]]
|date=2008-08-08
|first=Alex
|last=Barker
}}</ref>


In October 1994, Dr. Thomas Nicely, Professor of Mathematics at [[Lynchburg College]] independently discovered the [[software bug|bug]], and upon receiving no response from his inquiry to Intel, on October 30 posted a message on the Internet.<ref name='Nicely-email'> {{cite web|url=http://www.emery.com/bizstuff/nicely.htm |title=Dr. Thomas Nicely's Pentium email |accessdate=2007-07-12 |last=Nicely |first=Dr. Thomas R. |date=1994-10-30 |publisher=Vince Emery Productions }}</ref> Word of the bug spread quickly on the [[Internet]] and then to the industry press. Because the bug was easy to replicate by an average user (there was a sequence of numbers one could enter into the OS calculator to show the error), Intel's statements that it was minor and "not even an erratum" were not accepted by many computer users. During Thanksgiving 1994, [[The New York Times]] ran a piece by journalist [[John Markoff]] spotlighting the error. Intel changed its position and offered to replace every chip, quickly putting in place a large end-user [[Technical support|support]] organization. This resulted in a $500 million charge against Intel's 1994 [[revenue]].
==Activities==
{| class="infobox" cellpadding="1" style="font-size: 85%; align=right;"
|-
|align=center colspan=6|'''Activities of the Kurdistan Workers Party by Region'''<ref name="NewInternationalTerrorism">{{cite book|first=Stephen R|last=Barnhart|title=New International Terrorism and Political Violence Guide|isbn=1553692438|page=107-109|publisher=Trafford Publishing|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=kWK385cUCVoC&pg=PA107&vq=PKK&dq=New+International+Terrorism+and+Political+Violence.&source=gbs_search_r&cad=1_1&sig=ACfU3U2cbAJ-fmM1_flA4Lfahd80k77p4g}}<!-- this book looks really sketchy; let's look for alternatives --></ref><ref name="militaryacts">{{cite web|title=Kongra-Gel, KADEK, PKK|url=http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/para/pkk.htm|work=Global Security|accessdate=2005-04-01}}</ref>
|-
|bgcolor="#ccbcff" align=center|Target
|bgcolor="#e6d9ff" align=center colspan=2|Activity Category
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center|Turkey
|bgcolor="#e6f9ff" align=center|Northern<br/>Iraq
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center|Western<br/>Europe
|-
|bgcolor="#ccccff" rowspan=12| Government
|bgcolor="#e6d9ff" colspan=2|Demonstrations/Protests<ref name="NewInternationalTerrorism"/>
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center| [[Image:Yes check.svg|15px|Yes]]
|bgcolor="#e6f9ff" align=center| [[Image:Yes check.svg|15px|Yes]]
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center| [[Image:Yes check.svg|15px|Yes]]
|-
|bgcolor="#e6d9ff" colspan=2| [[Riot]]s<ref name="NewInternationalTerrorism"/>
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center| [[Image:Yes check.svg|15px|Yes]]
|bgcolor="#e6f9ff" align=center|
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center| [[Image:Yes check.svg|15px|Yes]]
|-
|bgcolor="#e6d9ff" colspan=2| Kidnapping<ref name="NewInternationalTerrorism"/>
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center| [[Image:Yes check.svg|15px|Yes]]
|bgcolor="#e6f9ff" align=center|
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center| [[Image:Yes check.svg|15px|Yes]]
|-
|bgcolor="#e6d9ff" colspan=2| [[Assassination]]<ref name="NewInternationalTerrorism"/>
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center| [[Image:Yes check.svg|15px|Yes]]
|bgcolor="#e6f9ff" align=center| [[Image:Yes check.svg|15px|Yes]]
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center|
|-
|bgcolor="#e6d9ff" colspan=2| [[Sabotage]]<ref name="NewInternationalTerrorism"/>
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center| [[Image:Yes check.svg|15px|Yes]]
|bgcolor="#e6f9ff" align=center|
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center|
|-
|bgcolor="#e6d9ff" colspan=2| [[Chemical warfare]]<ref>Two decoded cases: 1) August 27, 1996 mustard/sarin 2)(50 mg/l) of cyanide to three water tanks used by the Air Force.</ref>
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center| [[Image:Yes check.svg|15px|Yes]]
|bgcolor="#e6f9ff" align=center|
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center|
|-
|bgcolor="#e6d9ff" rowspan=3| [[Bomb#Bombing|Bombing<br/>Attacks]]<ref name="NewInternationalTerrorism"/>
|bgcolor="#e6d9ff"| Post/Train/Power
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center| [[Image:Yes check.svg|15px|Yes]]
|bgcolor="#e6f9ff" align=center|
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center|
|-
|bgcolor="#e6d9ff"| Police
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center| [[Image:Yes check.svg|15px|Yes]]
|bgcolor="#e6f9ff" align=center|
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center|
|-
|bgcolor="#e6d9ff"| Outposts
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center| [[Image:Yes check.svg|15px|Yes]]
|bgcolor="#e6f9ff" align=center|
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center|
|-
|bgcolor="#e6d9ff" rowspan=3 | Armed<br/>Attacks<ref name="NewInternationalTerrorism"/>
|bgcolor="#e6d9ff"| Military
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center| [[Image:Yes check.svg|15px|Yes]]
|bgcolor="#e6f9ff" align=center| [[Image:Yes check.svg|15px|Yes]]
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center|
|-
|bgcolor="#e6d9ff"| Police
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center| [[Image:Yes check.svg|15px|Yes]]
|bgcolor="#e6f9ff" align=center|
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center|
|-
|bgcolor="#e6d9ff"| Village Guards
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center| [[Image:Yes check.svg|15px|Yes]]
|bgcolor="#e6f9ff" align=center|
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center|
|-
|bgcolor="#ccdcff" rowspan=5| Civilian
|bgcolor="#e6d9ff" colspan=2| Kidnapping<ref name="NewInternationalTerrorism"/>
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center| [[Image:Yes check.svg|15px|Yes]]
|bgcolor="#e6f9ff" align=center|
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center|
|-
|bgcolor="#e6d9ff" colspan=2| Assassination<ref name="NewInternationalTerrorism"/>
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center| [[Image:Yes check.svg|15px|Yes]]
|bgcolor="#e6f9ff" align=center| [[Image:Yes check.svg|15px|Yes]]
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center|
|-
|bgcolor="#e6d9ff" rowspan=3| Bombing<br/>Attacks
|bgcolor="#e6d9ff"| Villages
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center| [[Image:Yes check.svg|15px|Yes]]
|bgcolor="#e6f9ff" align=center| [[Image:Yes check.svg|15px|Yes]]
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center|
|-
|bgcolor="#e6d9ff"| Touristic Facilities<ref name="NewInternationalTerrorism"/>
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center| [[Image:Yes check.svg|15px|Yes]]
|bgcolor="#e6f9ff" align=center|
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center|
|-
|bgcolor="#e6d9ff"| Commercial Units<ref name="NewInternationalTerrorism"/>
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center| [[Image:Yes check.svg|15px|Yes]]
|bgcolor="#e6f9ff" align=center|
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center|
|-
|bgcolor="#ccecff" rowspan=3| [[Organized Crime]]
|bgcolor="#e6d9ff" colspan=2| [[Extortion]]<ref name="PKKextortion US DOS">{{cite web|url=http://permanent.access.gpo.gov/lps14740/www.state.gov/www/global/terrorism/1997Report/eurasia.html|title=1997 Global Terrorism: Europe and Eurasia Overview| date=1997| accessdate=2008-02-23|publisher=[[United States Department of State]]}}</ref>
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center| [[Image:Yes check.svg|15px|Yes]]
|bgcolor="#e6f9ff" align=center|
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center| [[Image:Yes check.svg|15px|Yes]]
|-
|bgcolor="#e6d9ff" colspan=2| [[Illegal drug trade|Drug Trafficking]]<ref name="PKK US Embassy, Turkey">{{cite web|url=http://turkey.usembassy.gov/op_ed_04222006.html|title=Our Alliance Against Terrorism|accessdate=2007-07-15|publisher=[[United States Department of State]]}}</ref>
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center| Transit
|bgcolor="#e6f9ff" align=center| Transit
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center| Destination
|-
|bgcolor="#e6d9ff" colspan=2| [[Trafficking in human beings|Human Trafficking]]<ref name="PKK US Embassy, Turkey"/>
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center| Origin
|bgcolor="#e6f9ff" align=center| Origin
|bgcolor="#e6e9ff" align=center|
|}
During it's establishment in the mid 1970s, amid [[Right-wing and left-wing armed conflicts (Republic of Turkey)|violent clashes in the whole of Turkey]], organization used classic terrorism methods, such as failed assassination of Mehmet Celal Bucak as a [[propaganda-of-the-deed]].<ref>Joost Jongerden, PKK, CEU Political Science Journal. Vol. 3, No. 1 page 127-132</ref>. After the [[1980 military coup in Turkey|1980 military coup]] the organization developed into a paramilitary organization using resources it acquired in [[Bekaa valley]] in part of ex-Syrian-controlled [[Lebanon]]. After 1984, PKK began to use [[Maoism#Military strategy|Maoist theory of people's war]].<ref name=Radu2001>{{cite journal
| url = http://www.oranim.ac.il/courses/meast/extra/RISE%20AND%20FALL%20THE%20PKK.htm
| doi = 10.1016/S0030-4387(00)00057-0
| author = Radu, Michael
| journal = Orbis
| volume = 45
| issue = 1
| pages = 47–63
| month = Winter
| year = 2001
| title = The Rise and Fall of the PKK
| accessdate = 2008-06-29
}}</ref><ref>{{cite web
|url=http://www.wsws.org/articles/1999/mar1999/pkk-m12.shtml
|accessdate=2008-06-29
|title=The politics of the PKK (Kurdish Workers Party): A balance sheet
|author=Ute Reissner and Justus Leicht
|work=World Socialist
|publisher=ICFI
|date=1999-03-12
}}</ref> There are three phases in this theory. The militant base during the initial years was coming from different sources, so the first two phases were diffused to each other.


Ironically, the "Pentium flaw" incident, Intel's response to it, and the surrounding media coverage propelled Intel from being a technology supplier generally unknown to most computer users to a household name. Dovetailing with an uptick in the "[[Intel Corporation#Advertising and brand management|Intel Inside]]" campaign, the episode is considered by some to have been a positive event for Intel, changing some of its business practices to be more end-user focused and generating substantial public awareness, while avoiding (for most users) a lasting negative impression.<ref>Grove, Andrew and Burgleman, Robert; ''Strategy Is Destiny: How Strategy-Making Shapes a Company's Future'', 2001, Free Press</ref>
===1978-1984===
In the first phase (1978-1984), the PKK tried to gain the support of the population. It attacked the machinery of government and distributed propaganda in the region. PKK tactics were based on [[ambush]], [[sabotage]], [[riot]]s, protests, and [[demonstration]]s against the Turkish government. PKK has also been accused of violent attacks on individual civilians or residential areas (Kurds and non-Kurds alike), who refused to co-operate with the PKK or were suspected of collaborating with the Turkish authorities. During these years, the PKK fought a turf war against other predominantly Kurdish organisations in Turkey. The PKK effectively used the prison force to gain appeal among the population.<ref>{{cite news
|publisher=[[Zaman (newspaper)|Zaman]]
|language=Turkish
|url=http://www.zaman.com.tr/haber.do?haberno=620819
|accessdate=2008-07-09
|title=Eski Dışişleri Bakanı Hikmet Çetin: PKK'nın temeli 12 Eylül'de atıldı
|date=2007-12-03
|work=[[Cihan News Agency]]
|quote=PKK aslında nereden şiddetle çıktı. Bana göre Diyarbakır Cezaevi'nden, 12 Eylül'den sonra çıktı. Yani ortam, orada hazırlandı. Çıkış yeri orası. Orada işkenceden insanlar öldü. Sakat kalanlar Avrupa'ya gitti. Öyle bir ortamda.
}}</ref><ref>Immigration Appeals: 2nd - 3rd Quarter (2004), by Great Britain Immigration Appeal Tribunal</ref> In the whole Turkey, this period was characterized by [[Right-wing and left-wing armed conflicts (Republic of Turkey)|violent clashes]] which culminated in the [[1980 military coup in Turkey|1980 military coup]].


====Intel Inside, Intel Systems Division, and Intel Architecture Labs====
During this time, the organization argued that its violent actions were justified by the need to defend Kurds in the context of what it considered as the massive cultural suppression of Kurdish identity (including the 1983 [[Turkish Language Act Ban]]) and cultural rights carried out by other governments of the region.
During this period, Intel undertook two major supporting programs that helped guarantee their [[microprocessor|processor's]] success. The first is widely-known: the 1990 "[[Intel#Advertising and brand management|Intel Inside]]" marketing and branding campaign. This campaign established Intel, which had been a component supplier little-known outside the [[personal computer|PC]] industry, as a household name. The second program is little-known: Intel's Systems Group began, in the early 1990s, manufacturing PC "[[motherboards]]", the main board component of a personal computer, and the one into which the processor (CPU) and memory (RAM) chips are plugged. Shortly after, Intel began manufacturing fully-configured "white box" systems for the dozens of PC clone companies that rapidly sprang up. At its peak in the mid-1990s, Intel manufactured over 15% of all PCs, making it the third-largest supplier at the time. By manufacturing leading-edge PC motherboards systems, Intel enabled smaller manufacturers to compete with larger manufacturers, accelerating the adoption of the newest microprocessors and system architecture, including the [[Peripheral Component Interconnect|PCI]] bus, [[USB]] and other innovations. This led to more rapid adoption of each of its new processors in turn.{{Fact|date=July 2007}}


During the 1990s, Intel's [[Intel Architecture Labs|Architecture Lab]] (IAL) was responsible for many of the hardware innovations of the personal computer, including the [[Peripheral Component Interconnect|PCI]] Bus, the [[PCI Express]] (PCIe) bus, the [[Universal Serial Bus]] (USB), [[Bluetooth]] wireless interconnect, and the now-dominant architecture for multiprocessor servers. IAL's software efforts met with a more mixed fate; its video and graphics software was important in the development of software digital video, but later its efforts were largely overshadowed by competition from [[Microsoft]]. The competition between Intel and Microsoft was revealed in testimony by IAL Vice-President [[Steven McGeady]] at the [[Microsoft anti-trust case|Microsoft antitrust trial]].
=== 1984-1999 ===
In the second phase (1984-1999), which followed the return of civilian rule in 1983, escalating attacks were made on the government's military and vital institutions all over the country. The objective was to destabilise Turkish authority through a long, low-intensity confrontation. In addition to skirmishing with Turkish military and police forces and local [[village guards]], the PKK has conducted [[suicide bombing]] on government and police installations, as well as at local tourist sites. [[Kidnapping]] and [[assassination]] against government officials and Kurdish tribal leaders who were named as puppets of the state were performed as well. Widespread [[sabotage]]s were continued from the first stage. PKK performed [[kidnapping]] western [[tourist]]s, primarily in [[Istanbul]] but also at different resorts. Its actions have taken place mainly in Turkey and against Turkish targets in other countries, although it has on occasions co-operated with other Kurdish nationalist paramilitary groups in neighboring states, such as Iraq and Iran.<ref name=Cordesman1999>{{Citation
| author = Cordesman, Anthony H.
| year = 1999
| title = Iraq and the War of Sanctions: Conventional Threats and Weapons of Mass Destruction
| isbn = 0275965287
| publisher = Greenwood Publishing Group
}}</ref> PKK has also attacked Turkish diplomatic and commercial facilities across [[Western Europe]]. In effect, the Turkish state has led a series of [[counter-insurgency]] operations against the PKK, accompanied by political measures, starting with an explicit denunciation of separatism in the [[Constitution of Turkey|1982 Constitution]], and including proclamation of the [[state of emergency]] in various PKK-controlled territories starting in 1983 (when the military relinquished political control to the civilians). This series of [[Administrative reforms against terrorism (Republic of Turkey)|administrative reforms against terrorism]] included in 1985 the creation of [[village guard system]] by the then prime minister [[Turgut Özal]] who is of partial Kurdish descent.


Another factor contributing to rapid adoption of Intel's processors during this period were the successive release of [[Microsoft Windows]] operating systems, each requiring significantly greater processor resources. The releases of [[Windows 95]], [[Windows 98]], and [[Windows 2000]] provided impetus for successive generations of hardware.
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, in an effort to win increased support from the Kurdish peasantry, the PKK altered its leftist secular ideology to better accommodate and accept Islamic beliefs. The group also abandoned its previous strategy of attacking Kurdish civilians, focusing instead on government and tourist targets.<ref name="miptpkkmain">{{cite web|url= http://www.tkb.org/Group.jsp?groupID=63|work=MIPT Terrorism Knowledge Base|title=Group Profile: Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK)|accessdate=2007-04-17}}</ref> In its campaign, the organization has been accused of carrying out atrocities against both Turkish and Kurdish civilians and its actions have been criticised by [[human rights]] groups such as [[Amnesty International]] and [[Human Rights Watch]]. Actions of the [[Turkey|Turkish state]] in the past have also been criticised by these same groups.


===Competition, antitrust and espionage===
All in all, this [[low intensity conflict]] which has lasted more than thirty years has had a [[Effects of the Kurdistan Workers Party|number of effects in the Turkish territory]].
{{see also|AMD v. Intel}}
Two factors combined to end this dominance: the slowing of [[personal computer|PC]] demand growth beginning in 2000 and the rise of the low cost PC. By the end of the 1990s, [[microprocessor]] performance had outstripped software demand for that CPU power. Aside from high-end server systems and software, demand for which dropped with the end of the "[[dot-com bubble]]", consumer systems ran effectively on increasingly low-cost systems after 2000. Intel's strategy of producing ever-more-powerful processors and obsoleting their predecessors stumbled, leaving an opportunity for rapid gains by competitors, notably AMD. This in turn lowered the profitability of the processor line and ended an era of unprecedented dominance of the PC hardware by Intel.{{Fact|date=July 2007}}


Intel's dominance in the [[x86]] microprocessor market led to numerous charges of [[antitrust]] violations over the years, including [[Federal Trade Commission|FTC]] investigations in both the late 1980s and in 1999, and civil actions such as the 1997 suit by [[Digital Equipment Corporation]] (DEC) and a patent suit by [[Intergraph]]. Intel's market dominance (at one time it controlled over 85% of the market for 32-bit PC microprocessors) combined with Intel's own hardball legal tactics (such as its infamous 338 patent suit versus PC manufacturers)<ref>{{cite news |first=Richard |last=McCausland |coauthors= |title=Counterpunch: Amx86 buyers get 'legal aid.' - Advanced Micro Devices offers legal aid to manufactures of Amx86-based machines warned by Intel Corp. to take out patent licenses |date=[[1993-05-24]] |publisher=LookSmart Ltd. |url=http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0EKF/is_n1964_v39/ai_13901771 |work=FindArticles |pages= |accessdate=2007-07-12 |language=}}</ref> made it an attractive target for litigation, but few of the lawsuits ever amounted to anything.
=== 1999-current ===
In the third phase (1999-current), after capture of Ocelan, according to [[Maoism#Military strategy|Maoist theory of people's war]] claims that the [[conventional fighting]] should be established to seize cities, overthrow the government and take control of the country. This stage has never achieved. In effect, after the capture of Ocelan, activities of the organization never reached to previous levels.


A case of [[industrial espionage]] arose in 1995 that involved both Intel and AMD. Guillermo Gaede, an [[Argentina|Argentine]] formerly employed both at [[AMD]] and at Intel's [[Chandler, Arizona|Arizona]] plant, was arrested for attempting in 1993 to sell the [[i486]] and [[Pentium]] designs to AMD and to certain foreign powers.<ref name='intel-spy'>{{cite news |first= |last= |coauthors= |title=Worker Pleads Not Guilty in Intel Spy Case |date=1995-10-20 |publisher=[[The New York Times Company]] |url=http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=990CE7D81239F933A15753C1A963958260 |work=[[The New York Times]] |pages= |accessdate=2007-07-12 |language=}}</ref> Gaede videotaped data from his computer screen at Intel and mailed it to AMD, which immediately alerted Intel and authorities, resulting in Gaede's arrest. Gaede was convicted and sentenced to 33 months in prison in June 1996.<ref name='Guillermo Gaede'>{{cite news |first= |last= |coauthors= |title=Ex-Intel Engineer Sentenced to Prison Term |date=1996-06-25 |publisher=[[The New York Times Company]] |url=http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9E01E0DE1239F936A15755C0A960958260 |work=[[The New York Times]] |pages= |accessdate=2007-07-12 |language=}}</ref><ref name='Guilty'>{{cite news |first= |last= |coauthors= |title=Ex-Intel employee pleads guilty - Guillermo Gaede pleads guilty to stealing Intel trade secrets - Industry Legal Issue |date=1996-03-25 |publisher=LookSmart, Ltd. |url=http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0EKF/is_n2109_v42/ai_18135525 |work=findarticles.com |pages= |accessdate=2007-07-12 |language=}}</ref>
Since the 1999, the organization begin to use [[improvised explosive device]]s rather than direct confrontation.


===Partnership with Apple===
==Tactics==
<!-- Image with inadequate rationale removed: [[Image:Apple Intel transition WWDC.jpg|thumb|[[Steve Jobs]] confirms the rumors of the transition at the 2005 [[Worldwide Developers Conference|WWDC]]. The lowered "e" is a humorous reference to Intel's former logo.]] -->
The areas in which the group operates are generally mountainous rural areas and dense urban areas. The mountainous terrain offers an advantage to members of the PKK by allowing them to hide in a network of caves and making military air operations, especially helicopter use, hazardous for the Turkish Armed Forces. While in urban areas, PKK members are often able to blend in with the local population.
<!--Please rewrite from Intel's perspective. This only says the advantages for Apple (Amply written about in its own articles), not Intel-->
{{details|Apple Intel transition}}


On [[June 6]] [[2005]], [[Apple Inc.|Apple]] CEO [[Steve Jobs]] announced that Apple would be transitioning from its long favored [[PowerPC]] architecture to the Intel [[x86 architecture]], because the future PowerPC road map was unable to satisfy Apple's needs. The first [[Macintosh]] computers containing Intel CPUs were announced on [[January 10]], [[2006]], and Apple had its entire line of consumer Macs running on Intel processors by early August 2006. The Apple Xserve server was updated to Intel [[Xeon]] processors from November 2006, and is offered in a configuration similar to Apple's Mac Pro.<ref name=newmacs>[http://news.com.com/Jobs+New+Intel+Macs+are+screamers/2100-7354_3-6025409.html Jobs: New Intel Macs are 'screamers'] news.com</ref>
The group has been planting mines.<ref name="mine">[http://www.icbl.org/lm/country/turkey Turkey], Landmine Monitor, 2006.</ref> Use of these mines has led to civilian deaths, in part due to accidental triggering by civilian trucks and buses rather than the intended military [[armoured vehicle]]s.<ref name="mine" />


===Core 2 Duo advertisement controversy===
The PKK is known to use children within its militant force. Uğur Esentur of [[Ankara University]] has examined the motivations of some of these children for his doctoral research.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sagbilens.ankara.edu.tr/ithesis.php?id=2249
|accessdate=2008-07-11
|title=Thesis details
|first=Uğur
|last=Esentur
|publisher=Ankara Üniversity, Health Sciences Institute
|language=Turkish}} Electronic copy available from [http://tez2.yok.gov.tr/fmi/xsl/tez/listevedetay_liste.xsl?-db=TezVT&-lay=web_arama&-max=20&-token.error=liste.xsl&AdSoyad=U%C4%9Fur%20Esentur&-find=&-token.d=1 YOK] after [http://tez2.yok.gov.tr/ signing up].</ref> Of those surveyed, 86% had joined the PKK to bolster their families incomes following offers that it would provide for their families in return.<ref name="Hurriyet DeceivedChild">{{cite news|url=http://www.hurriyet.com.tr/gundem/6673759.asp?gid=180|title=Hepsi kandırılmış çocuklar|language=Turkish|work=[[Hürriyet]]|author=[[University of Ankara]]|accessdate=2007-06-09}}</ref> All of the children reported that these offers were not fulfilled.<ref name="Hurriyet DeceivedChild"/> 80% of those surveyed also reported that they had actively stopped other family members—usually younger brothers—from joining the organization too.<ref name="Hurriyet DeceivedChild"/> The study also reported that 60% of those surveyed had an education level below high school level.<ref name="Hurriyet DeceivedChild"/>


<!-- Image with unknown copyright status removed: [[Image:Coreintelad.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Controversial Core 2 Duo print advertisement.]] -->
When asked why they stayed in the PKK rather than turning themselves in to the authorities, two thirds stated that they were afraid of being caught by the PKK as reprisals are not just limited to physical harm towards the militant; their families would be at risk as well.<ref name="Hurriyet DeceivedChild"/> Five percent said that it was from fear of punishment by the Turkish Republic.<ref name="Hurriyet DeceivedChild"/> The study also examined attitudes toward gender equality within the organization. 88% of the subjects reported that, despite its Marxist ideology and claims that equality is a key objective, there was no equality within the organization.<ref name="Hurriyet DeceivedChild"/>


In <!--August (cannot be in August, since Nancy Bhagat's apology was filed in July, so the ad must be from earlier)--> 2007, the company released a print advertisement for its Core 2 Duo processor featuring six African American runners appearing to bow down to a Caucasian male inside of an office setting (due to the posture taken by runners on starting blocks). According to Nancy Bhagat, Vice President of Intel Corporate Marketing, the general public found the ad to be "insensitive and insulting".<ref name='Intel-ad blog'> {{cite web|url=http://blogs.intel.com/views/2007/07/sprinter_ad.html |title=Views@Intel - Sprinter Ad (Blog post) |accessdate=2007-08-09 |last=Bhagat |first=Nancy |date=2007-07-31 |work=blogs.intel.com |publisher=Intel Corporation }}</ref> The campaign was quickly pulled and several Intel executives made public apologies on the corporate website.<ref name='Intel-ad 2007-08'> {{cite web|url=http://www.intel.com/news/sprintad.htm?iid=search |title=Apologies from Intel for Sprinter Ad |accessdate=2007-08-09 |last=MacDonald |first=Don |work=Intel Corporation }}</ref>
==Resources ==
=== Financial ===


==Corporate affairs==
The organization's annual budget has been estimated at $86 million [[USD]].<ref>{{cite news
In September 2006, Intel had nearly 100,000 employees and 200 facilities world wide. Its 2005 revenues were $38.8 billion and its [[Fortune 500]] ranking was 49th. Its stock symbol is INTC, listed on the [[NASDAQ]].
|url=http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/IJ25Ak03.html
|first=Sami
|last=Moubayed
|accessdate=2008-07-11
|work=Asia Times Online
|title=No end in sight of the Kurdish fight
|date=2007-10-24
}}</ref>


===Leadership and corporate structure===
The PKK receives a proportion of its funding in the form of private donations, from both organisations and individuals from around the world. Some of these supporters are Kurdish businessmen in south-eastern Turkey, sympathisers in Syria and Iran, and Europe. Parties and concerts are organized by branch groups.<ref name="organizedcrime">{{cite web|title=Counter-Terrorism Studies|url=http://www.ict.org.il/organizations/orgdet.cfm?orgid=20|accessdate=2002-11-03}}</ref> Additionally, it is believed that the PKK earns money through the sale of various publications, as well as receiving revenues from legitimate businesses owned by the organization.<ref name="pkk2">{{cite web|title=Terrorism > Financing of its activities|url=http://www.mfa.gov.tr/financing-of-its-activities.en.mfa|accessdate=2008-07-10|publisher=Republic of Turkey, Ministry of Foreign Affairs}}</ref> The Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) also has been financing its separatist movement by extorting narcotics traffickers and engaging in the trade themselves. The PKK is heavily involved in the European drug trade, especially in Germany and France.<ref>{{cite web
[[Robert Noyce]] was Intel's [[Chief executive officer|CEO]] at its founding in 1968, followed by co-founder [[Gordon Moore]] in 1975. [[Andy Grove]] became the company's [[President]] in 1979 and added the CEO title in 1987 when Moore became Chairman. In 1997 Grove succeeded Moore as [[Chairman]], and [[Craig Barrett (Intel President)|Craig Barrett]], already company [[president]], took over. On [[May 18]] [[2005]], Barrett handed the reins of the company over to [[Paul Otellini]], who previously was the company president and was responsible for Intel's design win in the original [[IBM PC]]. The [[board of directors]] elected Otellini CEO, and Barrett replaced Grove as [[Board of directors|Chairman of the Board]]. Grove stepped down as Chairman, but is retained as a special adviser.
|url=http://www.turkishweekly.net/news.php?id=52491
|accessdate=2008-06-29
|title=Drug Smuggling As Main Source of PKK Terrorism
|date=2008-02-16
|work=[[Journal of Turkish Weekly]]
|first=Sedat
|last=Laciner
}}</ref> French law enforcement estimates that the PKK smuggles 80% of the heroin in Paris.<ref>{{cite web | first= Frank J. |last=Cilluffo | title = The Threat Posed from the Convergence of Organized Crime, Drug Trafficking, and Terrorism | work= Homeland Security | publisher= George Washington University|url=http://www.gwu.edu/~dhs/congress/dec13_00.html | accessdate = 2008-02-22 | date=2000-12-13}}</ref> The [[British Foreign Office]] has made a similar estimate for Britain.<ref>{{cite news|work=BBC|accessdate=2008-06-26|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/4305692.stm|title=Turkey at the drugs crossroads|first=Sarah|last=Rainsford|date=2005-10-06}}</ref>


Current members of the [[board of directors]] of Intel are Craig Barrett, [[Charlene Barshefsky]], [[Susan Decker]], James Guzy, [[Reed Hundt]], Paul Otellini, James Plummer, David Pottruck, Jane Shaw, John Thornton, and David Yoffie.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.intel.com/pressroom/bod.htm |title=Intel Board of Directors |accessdate=2007-09-15}}</ref>
=== Human ===
According to information provided by the Intelligence Resource Program of the [[Federation of American Scientists]]the strength of the organization in terms of human resources consists of approximately 4,000 to 5,000 militants of whom 3,000 to 3,500 are located in northern Iraq.<ref>{{cite web
|url=http://fas.org/irp/world/para/pkk.htm
|title=Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK)
|work=[[Federation of American Scientists]]
|accessdate=2008-07-23
|date=2004-05-21
|first=John
|last=Pike
}}</ref>


===Employment===
A study carried out by the Counter-Terrorism and Operations Department of Directorate General for Security over a sample of files about people convicted of being a terrorist under Turkish laws including 262 militants from the organization has found that 54% of the members are aged 14 to 25, 34% 26 to 37 and 12% 38 to 58. University graduates make up 11 % of the members, high school graduates 16 %, secondary school graduates 13 %, primary school graduates 39%, literate non-graduates 12% and illiterates 9%.<ref>{{cite news
[[Image:Intel Costa 12 2007 SJO 105b.jpg|thumb|[[Intel]] microprocessor facility in Costa Rica was responsible in 2006 for 20% of Costa Rican exports and 4.9% of the country's [[GDP]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://eleconomista.es/empresas-finanzas/noticias/81837/10/06/Intel-supone-el-49-por-ciento-del-PIB-de-Costa-Rica.html |title=Intel supone el 4,9 por ciento del PIB de Costa Rica|date=2006-10-06|publisher=El Economista|accessdate=2008-04-13|language=Spanish }}</ref>]]
|url=http://www.zaman.com/tz-web/detaylar.do?load=detay&link=130015
Intel is not typical of its [[Silicon Valley]] counterparts. Its culture is not as relaxed and informal as companies such as [[Google]] or [[Sun Microsystems]]. It has a fairly strict meritocracy that rewards work generously and does not keep underperforming employees around for very long.<ref name='iWon'> {{cite web|url=http://www1.iwon.com/home/careers/company_profile/0,15623,1221,00.html |title=iWon company profiles: Intel |accessdate=2007-07-28 |work=iWon.com |publisher=IAC Search & Media }}</ref><ref name='Intel layoff 2006'>{{cite news |first=Andy |last=Patrizio |coauthors= |title=Big Intel Layoffs Could Come Next Week |date=[[2006-08-31]] |publisher=Jupitermedia Corporation |url=http://www.internetnews.com/bus-news/article.php/3629861 |work=internetnews.com |pages= |accessdate=2007-07-28 |language=}}</ref>
|title=Survey: Over 50 percent of PKK terrorists below 25
|work=[[Zaman]]
|accessdate=2008-07-23
|date=2007-12-25
}}<!-- Turkish version, with chart: http://zaman.com.tr/haber.do?haberno=628867 --></ref>


The firm promotes very heavily from within, most notably in its executive suite. The company has resisted the trend toward outsider CEOs. Paul Otellini was a 30-year veteran of the company when he assumed the role of CEO. All of his top lieutenants have risen through the ranks after many years with the firm. In many cases, Intel's top executives have spent their entire working careers with Intel, a very rare occurrence in volatile Silicon Valley.
===International support===
At the height of its campaign, the organization received support from many countries. The level support given have changed through out this period.


Intel has a mandatory retirement policy for its CEO when they reach age 65, but only one CEO, Barrett, has actually retired at 65. Previous CEOs all retired before reaching that age; Grove retired at 62, while both Robert Noyce and Gordon Moore retired at 58. At 57, Otellini has a long career at the helm ahead of him, assuming he goes until age 65 and performs satisfactorily.
Support of [[Syria]],<ref name="organizedcrime" /><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/1998/int/980330/europe.a_hellenic_haven.19.html|title=A Hellenic Haven|first=Massimo|last=Calabresi|work=Time|accessdate=2007-10-22}}</ref> From early 1979 to 1999 [[Syrian terrorism|Syria]] had provided valuable safe havens to PKK in the region of [[Beqaa|Beqaa Valley]]. After [[History of the Kurdistan Workers Party#The undeclared war|the undeclared war]] between Turkey and Syria, Syria placed restrictions on PKK activity on its soil. Turkey is expecting positive developments in its cooperation with Syria in the long term, but even during the course of 2005, there were PKK operatives of Syrian nationality operating in Turkey.


No one has an office; everyone, even Otellini, sits in a [[cubicle]]. This is designed to promote [[egalitarianism]] among employees, but some new hires have difficulty adjusting to this change. Intel is not alone in this policy. [[Hewlett-Packard]] has a similar no-office policy, as does [[NVIDIA]].
Support of [[Iran]];<ref>{{cite book| title =Turkey: facing a new millennium: Coping with Intertwined Conflicts (Europe in Change)|first=Amikam|last=Nachmani| publisher=Manchester University Press|isbn=0719063701 | year = 2003 }}</ref>{{page number}} Iran [[Kurdistan Workers Party/States Listed as Terrorist|listed]] PKK as a terrorist organization after Iran's supply of resources to the PKK began to be used on its own soil. [[Iran]] provided PKK with supplies in the form of weapons and funds.


Outside of California, the company has facilities in [[China]], [[Costa Rica]], [[Malaysia]], [[Mexico]], [[Israel]], [[Ireland]], [[India]], [[Philippines]], [[Russia]], and [[Vietnam]] internationally. In the U.S. Intel employs significant numbers of people in [[California]], [[Colorado]], [[Massachusetts]], [[Arizona]], [[New Mexico]], [[Oregon]], [[Texas]], [[Washington]], and [[Utah]].<ref>{{cite web|title=Intel Communities|url=http://www.intel.com/community/selectacommunity.htm?iid=intel_comm+comm_select|work=Intel|accessdate=2008-01-23}}</ref> In Oregon, Intel is the state's largest employer with over 16,000 employees, primarily in Hillsboro.<ref name=businessprofile>Suh, Elizabeth. [http://www.oregonlive.com/special/oregonian/index.ssf?/base/news/1192589730189230.xml&coll=7 Home of Oregon's largest employer and much more.] ''[[The Oregonian]]'', [[October 28]] [[2007]].</ref> The company is the largest industrial employer in [[New Mexico]] while in Arizona the company has over 10,000 employees.
Support of [[Greece]]; retired Greek L.T. General Dimitris Matafias and retired Greek Navy Admiral Antonis Neksasis had visisted organization's Mahsun Korkmaz base camp in Bakaa valley in October 1988 along with parliamentarians from the panhellenic Socialist movement (PASOK).<ref name="gunter110"/> At the time it was reported that the general has assumed responsibility for training. Greeks also dispatched arms through Greek Cypriot administration. <ref name="gunter110"> Michael M. Gunter The Kurds and the Future of Turkey page 110</ref> In December 1993, Greek European affairs minister Theodore Pangaios was quoted saying "we must supportive of the Kurdish people to be free".<ref name="gunter111"/> Greece declained to join Germany and France including other eleven memebers at the EU to ban the organization.<ref name="gunter111"> Michael M. Gunter The Kurds and the Future of Turkey page 111</ref> During the 1990s, [[Greece]]<ref>{{cite news|work=BBC|accessdate=2007-09-01|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/358115.stm|title=Ocalan: Greeks supplied Kurdish rebels|date=1999-06-02}}</ref>


====Diversity Initiative====
Support of [[Republic of Cyprus]] was brought in question when [[Abdullah Öcalan]] was caught with a Cypriot passport [[:Image:Cypruspassportofocalan.jpg| to the name of Mavros Lazaros]], a nationalist reporter.
Intel has a Diversity Initiative, including employee diversity groups as well as supplier diversity programs.<ref name='Intel Diversity'> {{cite web|url=http://www.intel.com/jobs/diversity/index.htm |title=Jobs at Intel - Diversity |accessdate=2007-07-28 |work=intel.com |publisher=Intel Corporation }}</ref> Like many companies with employee diversity groups, they include groups based on race and nationality as well as sexual identity and religion. In 1994, Intel sanctioned one of the earliest corporate Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender employee groups,<ref name=gay>[http://www.intelglbt.org/ Intel Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual or Transgender Employees Home Page]</ref> and supports a Muslim employees group,<ref name='IMEG'> {{cite web|url=http://www.intel.com/jobs/diversity/people/emplgroups.htm?grp=13 |title=Jobs at Intel - Diversity, Employee Groups (Intel Muslim Employee Group) |accessdate=2007-07-28 |work=Intel Corporation}}</ref> a Jewish employees group,<ref name='IJC'> {{cite web|url=http://www.intel.com/jobs/diversity/people/emplgroups.htm?grp=11 |title=Jobs at Intel - Diversity, Employee Groups (Intel Jewish Community) |accessdate=2007-07-28 |work=Intel Corporation }}</ref> and a Bible-based Christian group.<ref name='IBCN'> {{cite web|url=http://www.intel.com/jobs/diversity/people/emplgroups.htm?grp=7 |title=Jobs at Intel - Diversity, Employee Groups (Intel Bible-Based Christian Network) |accessdate=2007-07-28 |work=Intel Corporation }}</ref><ref name='IBCN website'>[http://ibcn.org/ Intel Bible-Based Christian Network (IBCN) website]</ref>


Intel received a 100% rating on the first Corporate Equality Index released by the [[Human Rights Campaign]] in 2002. It has maintained this rating in 2003 and 2004. In addition, the company was named one of the 100 Best Companies for Working Mothers in 2005 by Working Mother magazine. However, Intel's working practices still face criticism, most notably from Ken Hamidi,<ref name='FACE'> {{cite web|url=http://www.faceintel.com/ |title=FACE Intel Index |accessdate=2007-07-28 |last=Hamidi |first=Ken |work=faceintel.com }}</ref> a former employee who has been subject to multiple unsuccessful lawsuits from Intel.
The support of paramilitary groups; The organization developed links with paramilitary groups among other ethnic groups which has harboured historic grievances against Turkey such as the [[Armenian people|ethnic Armenian]] [[ASALA]],<ref name="sovietconnection2">{{cite web
|url=http://www.globalpolitician.com/23436-terror-russia
|accessdate=2008-06-29
|title=Roots of Islamic Terrorism: How Communists Helped Fundamentalists
|work=Global Politician
|date=2007-09-11
|first=Antero
|last=Leitzinger
}}</ref> as well as groups which shared its [[left-wing]] [[nationalist]] ideology such as the [[Palestine Liberation Organisation]], [[ETA]], and, to a lesser degree, the [[Provisional Irish Republican Army]].<ref name="sovietconnection2" /> Through the large Kurdish immigration in [[Germany]], it has also formed close contacts with violent left-wing political groups in that country.


===Finances===
Support of the [[Soviet Union]];<ref name=Cornell2001>{{cite journal
[[Image:Intc-hist-price-1986-2006.png|left|300px|thumb|Intel stock price, Nov 1986 - Nov 2006]]
| doi = 10.1016/S0030-4387(00)00056-9
Intel's [[market capitalization]] is $129.34 billion (June 17, 2008). It publicly trades on [[NASDAQ]] with the symbol INTC. A widely-held stock, the following indices comprise Intel shares: [[Dow Jones Industrial Average]], [[S&P 500]], [[NASDAQ-100]], [[PHLX Semiconductor Sector|SOX]] (PHLX Semiconductor Sector), and [[GSTI Software Index]].
| last = Cornell
| first = Svante E
| journal = Orbis
| volume = 45
| issue = 1
| pages = 31–46
| year = 2001
| title = The Kurdish Question in Turkish Politics
| accessdate = 2008-06-29
}}</ref> According to the former [[KGB]]-[[FSB]] officer [[Alexander Litvinenko]], who was assassinated in 2006, PKK's leader Abdullah Ocalan was among the terrorists trained by [[KGB]]-[[FSB]].<ref>{{cite news
|url=http://www.chechenpress.co.uk/english/news/2005/07/11/01.shtml
|accessdate=2008-06-29
|title=The originator of the acts of terrorism in London was standing near Tony Blair
|date=2007-05-11
|work=Chechen Press
|archiveurl=http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/regions/london/2005/07/318875.html
|archivedate=2007-05-19
}}</ref> As of 2008, Russia still is not among the [[List of countries and organizations that list the PKK as a terrorist group|states that list PKK as a terrorist group]].


On [[July 15]], [[2008]], Intel announced that it had achieved the highest earnings in the history of the company during [[Q2]] 2008.<ref>[http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20080715-intel-posts-record-breaking-q2-earnings.html Intel posts record-breaking Q2 earnings<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
Support of [[UK]]; TV broadcast for five years in UK, until its licence was revoked by the regulators Independent Television Commission (ITC) in 1999 due to a breach of ITC guidelines and perceived pro-PKK bias.
<br clear="all" />


===Advertising and brand management===<!-- This section is linked from [[X86 architecture]] -->
Support of various Europe states; Despite Brussels designation of the organization as a terrorist organization, the EU continues to permit the broadcasting of organization's networks on the Hot Bird 3 satellite owned by the French company Eutelsat. MEDYA TV started transmissions from studios in Belgium via a satellite uplink from [[France]]. MEDYA TV's licence was revoked by the French authorities. A few weeks later [[Roj TV]] began transmissions from Denmark. It has also been argued that the [[Netherlands]] and [[Belgium]] have supported the PKK by allowing its training camps to function in their respective territories. On [[November 22]] [[1998]], Hanover's criminal police reported that three children had been trained by the PKK for guerrilla warfare in camps in the Netherlands and Belgium.<ref>[http://www.globalmarch.org/resourcecentre/world/belgium.pdf GlobalMarch report]</ref> After the death of [[Theo van Gogh (film director)|Theo van Gogh]], with increasing attention on domestic security concerns, the Dutch police raided the 'PKK paramilitary camp' in the Dutch town of [[Liempde]] and arrested 29 people in November 2004.<ref>{{cite news | work=Expatica| title = Dutch police raid 'PKK paramilitary camp' | url=http://www.expatica.com/nl/articles/news/dutch-police-raid-pkk-paramilitary-camp-13898.html | accessdate = 2008-07-22 | date=2004-11-12 }}</ref> [[Denmark]] allows Kurdish satellite television stations (such as ROJ-TV), which [[Turkey]] claims has links with the PKK, to operate in Denmark and broadcast into Turkey.<ref>{{cite web | title = Denmark, again? Now it's under fire for hosting Kurdish TV station. | csmonitor.com | url=http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0421/p01s01-woeu.html | accessdate = 2008-02-22 | year = 2008 }}</ref>
{{Refimprovesect|date=May 2008}}


Intel has become one of the world's most recognizable computer brands following its long-running "Intel Inside" [[advertising campaign|campaign]]. The campaign, which started in 1991,<ref>{{citeweb|title=Intel Inside Program: Anatomy of a Brand Campaign|url=http://www.intel.com/pressroom/intel_inside.htm|publisher=''Intel''|accessdate=2008-05-12}}</ref> was created by Intel marketing manager Dennis Carter.<ref>{{cite web|title=Intel Inside Program|url=http://www.intel.com/pressroom/intel_inside.htm|work=Intel}}</ref> The five-note jingle was introduced the following year and by its tenth anniversary was being heard in 130 countries around the world.
Various PKK leaders, including Hidir Yalcin, Riza Altun, Zubeyir Aydar, and Ali Haydar Kaytan all lived in Europe and moved freely. The free movement was archived by the strong ties with influential persons. [[Danielle Mitterrand]], the wife of the former [[President of France]], had active connections during the 90s with elements of the organization's leadership that force a down graded relationships between these states.<ref name="olson">{{cite book|title=The Kurdish Nationalist Movement in the 1990s: Its Impact on Turkey and the Middle East|publisher=University Press of Kentucky|year=1996|isbn=0813119995|last=Olson|first=Robert W.|authorlink=Robert W. Olson|quote=...President Mitterand's, admittedly estranged wife Danielle. So bad had ties [Franch-Turkey] been at one stage that formal relations had been down graded to the level of charge d'affaires.|page=122}}</ref> [[Ali Rıza Altun]], a suspected key figure with an [[Interpol]] arrest warrant in his name, after harboring him for some time [[Austria]] arranged a flight to [[Iraq]].<!-- The amount of time is not specified in the source but never the less is mentioned-->. Turkish foreign minister [[Abdullah Gül]] summoned the Austrian ambassador and condemned Austria's action.<ref name="Austria Ali riza altun">{{cite web|url=http://www.hurriyet.com.tr/dunya/6915035.asp?gid=180|title=Avusturya teröristi uçakla Irak'a gönderdi|work=[[Hürriyet]]|accessdate=2007-07-18|language=Turkish}}</ref> On [[September 30]] [[1995]], While Ocelan was at Syria, [[Damascus]] opened contact with high ranking German [[Christian Democratic Union of Germany|CDU]] MP Heinrich Lummer and German intelligence officials.
[[Image:Intel Logo.svg|right|140px|thumb|Intel's old [[logo]] <br>(1968&ndash;December 2005)]]
[[Image:Intel Inside Logo.svg|right|140px|thumb|The well known <br>''Intel Inside'' slogan <br>(1990&ndash;2003)]]
[[Image:Intelinsidemodified.PNG|right|140px|thumb|Before its phase-out, the 'Intel Inside' logo was modified to resemble the original Intel logo by lowering the Intel 'e' and changing the typeface.]]
[[Image:Intel 4c 100tag.svg|right|140px|thumb|Intel's new logo and slogan <br>(December 2005&ndash;Present)]]


The ''Intel Inside'' program was supportive of advertisers and further served to broaden the company's awareness as a key ingredient inside [[personal computer|PCs]]. Intel paid some of the advertiser's costs for an ad that used the "Intel Inside" logo. If the ads did not meet agreed upon requirements, Intel was not obligated to reimburse costs. PC companies advertising products containing Intel chips include the jingle in their film and television advertisements in order to receive the reimbursement.
The Chief of the Turkish General Staff during 2007, General [[Yaşar Büyükanıt]], stated that even though the international struggle had been discussed on every platform and even though organizations such as the [[United Nations|UN]], [[NATO]], [[European Union|EU]] make statements of serious commitment, to this day the necessary measures had not been taken.<ref name="buyukanitquote"/> According to Büyükanıt; "''this conduct on one side has encouraged the terrorists, on the other side it assisted in widening their [the terrorists] activities. The most distressful part of it is that many of the European countries being a member of NATO, an organization that had announced that terrorism was the greatest threat to itself.<ref name="buyukanitquote">{{cite news|title=PKK'ya yardım eden NATO üyesi Avrupa ülkeleri var|language=Turkish|work=[[Hürriyet]]|date=2007-05-22|language=Turkish| url=http://www.hurriyet.com.tr/gundem/6560384.asp?gid=180}}</ref>''"
Sedat Laciner, of the Turkish think tank [[International Strategic Research Organization|ISRO]], says that US support of the PKK undermines the US [[war on terrorism]].<ref>{{cite web
|url=http://www.turkishweekly.net/editorial.php?id=29
|title=The West and Terrorism: PKK as a Privileged Terrorist Organization
|work=[[Journal of Turkish Weekly]]
|publisher=[[International Strategic Research Organization]]
|accessdate=2008-06-29
|date=2006-05-14
|first=Sedat
|last=Laciner
}}</ref> [[Seymour Hersh]] claimed that the U.S. supported [[PEJAK]], the Iranian branch of the PKK.<ref>{{cite news
|url=http://www.newyorker.com/archive/2006/11/27/061127fa_fact?currentPage=all
|first=Seymour
|last=Hersh
|accessdate=2008-06-29
|title=The Next Act
|date=2007-11-26
|quote=In the past six months, Israel and the United States have also been working together in support of a Kurdish resistance group known as the Party for Free Life in Kurdistan.
|work=[[The New Yorker]]
}}</ref> The head of the PKK's militant arm, Murat Karayilan, claimed that Iran attempted to recruit the PKK to attack coalition forces, adding that Kurdish guerrillas have launched a clandestine war in north-western Iran, ambushing Iranian troops.<ref name=tel>{{cite news | title = Kurdish guerillas launch clandestine war in Iran |work=[[Daily Telegraph]]| url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/1562707/Kurdish-guerillas-launch-clandestine-war-in-Iran.html | accessdate = 2008-02-22 | year = 2008 }}</ref> A former militant, who recently had turned himself in to the Turkish police, claimed that the weapons for in the north of Iraq were provided by US armoured vehicles.<ref>{{cite news
|url=http://www.turkishdailynews.com.tr/article.php?enewsid=77478
|title=US envoy denies PKK claims
|work=[[Turkish Daily News]]
|date=2007-07-04
|accessdate=2008-07-23
}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://turkey.usembassy.gov/askarchives.html
|work=Ask the Ambassador Archives
|title=I saw on TV that PKK terrorists are saying that the US is supplying weapons to PKK members in camps in Kandil Mountain. How do you respond?
|publisher=Embassy of the United States
|accessdate=2008-07-23
|date=2008-07-23
|first=Didem
|last=Ozbag
}}</ref> In July 2007, the weapons captured from the PKK operatives and their origins published by the Turkish General Staff indicates that the operatives delete some of the serial numbers from their weapons. The total number of weapons and for tracable ones the origins were:<ref name="waponsandorigins">{{cite news|url=http://www.hurriyet.com.tr/gundem/6922630.asp?gid=180|title=İşte PKK'nın silahlarının listesi|accessdate=2007-07-19|language= Turkish|work=[[Hürriyet]]}}</ref>


The [[Centrino]] advertising campaign has been hugely successful, leading to the ability to access wireless internet from a [[laptop]] becoming linked in consumers' minds to Intel chips.{{Fact|date=July 2007}} In the UK this has caused some controversy, as the [[Advertising Standards Authority|ASA]] upheld complaints that this was a misleading advert.<ref name='Register 2005-11-29'>{{cite news |first=Tony |last=Smith |coauthors= |title=PC World notebook ad 'misleading', ASA rules |date=[[2005-11-29]] |url=http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/11/29/asa_misleading_pcworld_ad/ |work=[[The Register]] |pages= |accessdate=2008-01-07 |language=}}</ref>
{| class="wikitable"
|+
!colspan=3|The organization's choice & origins of the traceable weapons (July 2007)<ref name="waponsandorigins"/>
|-
!Type
!Quantity
!Sources
|-
|[[AK-47|AK-47 Kalashnikovs]]
|4,500
|71.6% originating from the [[USSR]], 14.7% from [[China]], 3.6% from [[Hungary]], 3.6% from [[Bulgaria]]
|-
|Rifles<br> <ref>([[Kannas]], [[PKC automatic rifle]], [[Dragunov Sniper Rifle]], [[Arbiki]], [[Heckler & Koch G3]], [[M16 rifle]], [[Heckler & Koch PSG1]] (G-1), [[Mauser]]) </ref>
|5,713 of (959 traceable)
|45.2% from [[Russia]], 13.2% from [[United Kingdom]], and 9.4% from [[United States]].
|-
|[[rocket launchers]]
|1,610 (313 traceable)
|85% from [[Russia]], 5.4% from [[Iraq]], and 2.5% from [[China]] in origin.
|-
|[[pistol]]
|2,885 (2,208 traceable)
|21.9% from [[Czechoslovakia]], 20.2% from [[Spain]], 19.8% from [[Italy]]
|-
|[[grenade]]
|3,490 (136 traceable)
|72% from [[Russia]], 19.8% from [[United States]], 8% from [[Germany]],
|-
|[[Land mine|mines]]
|11,568 (8,015 traceable)
|60.8% from [[Italy]], 28.3% from [[Russia]], 6.2% from [[Germany]]
|}


In December 2005, Intel phased out the "Intel Inside" campaign in favor of a new logo and the slogan, "Leap ahead". The new logo is clearly inspired by the "Intel Inside" logo.
==Effects==
{{Main|Effects of the Kurdistan Workers Party}}


In 2006, Intel expanded its promotion of open specification platforms beyond [[Centrino]], to include the [[Viiv]] media centre PC and the business desktop [[Intel vPro]].
As a self-styled revolutionary [[Left-wing politics|left-wing]] organization, the PKK has cited "''mass violence by the Turkish state on the Kurd identity''" to justify its activities.{{Fact|date=June 2008}} The main goal of its activities was to alienate the people from the state by pushing security forces into more and more overt and repressive counter-measures. The [[Effects of the Kurdistan Workers Party#Political.2FJustice|Political-Justice]] section extends the results of this ideology and methods of the democratic processes and the justice system in Turkey. In a democratic system, an ideology that questions the state's legitimacy, will of its population and its security apparatus was difficult to be accepted as a political view, which was shaped under [[Effects of the Kurdistan Workers Party#HEP.2FDEP.2FHADEP|HEP/DEP/HADEP]] story. Turkish government authorities did not negotiate with the organization, so [[Effects of the Kurdistan Workers Party#Non governmental Organisations (NGO)|regional NGOs]] there were no communication channels between the sides. The ill-formed language ban of 1983 and Terrorism Act of 1991 were significant events. Also, amnesties were interesting events during the conflict time, as each amnesty gave more human resources to the organization. The prison as a rehabilitation concept was a failure. The people who were jailed for non-violent activities were becoming militants during their jail time. Government's military operations against the prisons were the highest point in this failure.


In mid January 2006, Intel announced that they were dropping the long running ''Pentium'' name from their processors. The Pentium name was first used to refer to the P5 core Intel processors (Pent refers to the 5 in P5,) and was done to circumvent court rulings that prevent the [[trademark]]ing of a string of numbers, so competitors could not just call their processor the same name, as had been done with the prior 386 and 486 processors. (Both of which had copies manufactured by both IBM and AMD). They phased out the Pentium names from mobile processors first, when the new [[Yonah]] chips, branded [[Intel Core|Core]] Solo and Core Duo, were released. The desktop processors changed when the Core 2 line of processors were released.
As a revolutionary [[Left-wing politics|left-wing]] organization, the PKK perceived Turkish society as one that was deformed by capitalism and imperialism. The PKK unleashed its aggression on enemies spanning all classes (farmers, business, etc.) and those that it considered puppets of the state. The [[Effects of the Kurdistan Workers Party#Economy|cost of the PKK's actions]] are significant. PKK had drastic effects on [[Effects of the Kurdistan Workers Party#Regional Economy|regional economy]], as targeted infrastructure of the region. Regions' inability to join the economical activities were associated with the [[Effects of the Kurdistan Workers Party#Work Force|work force]], costs (insurance premiums, facility costs, loss of trained personnel etc.), and productivity (loss of work time, travel restrictions, inability to move rapidly etc). The region has had a very high historical tourism potential and it has been dormant because of the terrorism threat for many years.


In March 2007, the Intel logo was shown briefly in one of the scenes of the movie, "[[The Last Mimzy]]."
The integration into social and economical activities are developed within the education system. [[Effects of the Kurdistan Workers Party#Education|Educational]] activities were targeted by the PKK. Because the majority of the people are very resilient to the effects of political violence, young people form a high risk group because of their undeveloped personalities. The effects of political violence on the newer generations is an important issue because, at the moment, the new generation in areas affected by the conflict have no experience living under what would be considered normal conditions.


As from 2008, Intel plans to shift the emphasis of its "Intel Inside" campaign from traditional media such as television and print to newer media such as the Internet. Intel will require that a minimum of 35% of the money it provides to the companies in its co-op program be used for online marketing.<ref name='IHT 2007-10-11'>{{cite news |first=Stuart |last=Elliott |coauthors= |title='Intel inside' ad campaign shifts focus to the Web |date=2007-10-11 |publisher=[[The New York Times Company]] |url=http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/10/11/business/adco.php?WT.mc_id=atomtechnology |work=[[International Herald Tribune]] |accessdate=2007-10-12}}</ref>
This conflict became part with the negotiations between Turkey and the [[European Union]] (EU) about its eventual [[Accession of Turkey to the European Union|integration to the EU]].


Intel's "Intel Inside" campaign has generally been considered to be world class marketing. However, over the years there have been several plays on the Intel branding scheme which have appeared on the web. While such jabs at Intel are obviously beyond the company's ability to control, they do tend to show that not everyone believes that Intel's programs and policies are always world class. For example, there is the popular "evil inside" logo,<ref>[http://www.stickergiant.com/Merchant2/merchant.mvc?Screen=PROD&Product_Code=rst105 Evil Inside Stickers : Vinyl Sticker<!--Bot-generated title-->]</ref> the ubiquitous picture of a tombstone with "R.I.P Intel Inside"<ref name='Inquirer 2006-04-11'>{{cite news |first= |last= |coauthors= |title=IBM leads semiconductor plot against Intel |date=[[2006-04-11]] |publisher=The [[Inquirer]] |url=http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=30912 |work=theinquirer.net |pages= |accessdate=2008-01-07 |language=}}</ref>
== Toll ==
{{further|[[Turkey–Kurdistan Workers Party conflict]]}}
More than 37,000 people have died since the beginning of the PKK's armed struggle in 1984.<ref>{{cite news| title=Kurdish rebels kill Turkey troops| url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/6537751.stm| date=2007-04-08| accessdate=2008-02-23|work=BBC}}</ref> According to Denise Natali, the [[Turkish Armed Forces]] have destroyed some 8000 Kurdish communities and created 3 to 4 million refugees in the process.<ref>Natali, Denise. ''The Kurds and the State''. [[Syracuse University Press]], 2005, pg. 108.</ref>


====Sonic logo====
According to official figures released by the Turkish military for the 1984-2008 period:<ref name=hurriyet9914612>{{cite news|url=http://www.hurriyet.com.tr/gundem/9914612.asp?gid=0&srid=0&oid=0&l=1
The famous "D♭&nbsp; D♭&nbsp; G♭&nbsp; D♭&nbsp; A♭" [[jingle]], sonic logo, tag, audio [[mnemonic]] ''([http://www.uspto.gov/go/kids/soundex/75332744.mp3 MP3 file of sonic logo])'' was written by [[Walter Werzowa]] from the Austrian 1980s sampling band [[Edelweiss (band)|Edelweiss]].<ref name=jingle>[http://observer.guardian.co.uk/print/0,3858,4774366-111639,00.html Paul Morley on the Intel Pentium ad jingle] Guardian Online</ref>
|accessdate=2008-09-17
|title=Bir dönemin acı bilançosu
|work=[[Hürriyet]]
|date=2008-09-16
|language=Turkish}}</ref>


=== Open source support ===
* 32,000 militants have been killed.
{{misleading|section|Talk:Intel Corporation#Misleading part in 'Open source support'}}
* 14,000 militants have been captured alive.
{{update}}
* 5,560 civilians have been killed.
Intel has a significant participation in the [[open source]] communities. For example, in 2006 Intel released [[MIT licence|MIT-licensed]] [[X.org]] drivers for their integrated [[graphic card|graphic cards]] of the i965 family of chipsets. On other occasions, Intel released [[FreeBSD]] drivers for some networking cards,<ref> {{cite web|url=http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=em |title=FreeBSD Kernel Interfaces Manual |accessdate=2007-08-05 |date=2005-11-27 |work=freebsd.org |publisher=The FreeBSD Project }}</ref> available under a BSD-compatible licence, which were also ported to [[OpenBSD]]. Intel also released its [[EFI]] core named as EDK under a BSD-compatible licence. Intel runs [[Moblin project]] and ''LessWatts.org'' campaigns.<ref>[http://www.lesswatts.org/about.php About LessWatts.org]</ref>
* 6,482 soldiers have been killed.


However, after the release of the wireless products called Intel Pro/Wireless 2100, 2200BG/2225BG/2915ABG and 3945ABG in 2005, Intel was criticized for not granting free redistribution rights for the firmwares that are necessary to be included in the operating systems for the wireless devices to operate.<ref>{{cite news |first=Sam |last=Varghese |coauthors= |title=OpenBSD to support more wireless chipsets |date=[[2005-03-01]] |publisher=The Age Company Ltd |url=http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2005/03/01/1109546842718.html |work=theage.com.au |pages= |accessdate=2007-08-05 |language=}}</ref> As a result of this, Intel became a target of campaigns to allow free operating systems to include binary firmwares on terms acceptable to the open source community. [[Linspire]]-[[Linux]] creator [[Michael Robertson (businessman)|Michael Robertson]] outlined the difficult position that Intel was in releasing to Open Source, as Intel did not want to upset their large customer [[Microsoft]].<ref name='M.Robertson'> {{cite web|url=http://www.michaelrobertson.com/archive.php?minute_id=56 |title=Is Intel's "Centrino" Techno-Latin for "No Linux?" |accessdate=2007-08-05 |last=Robertson |first=Michael |date=2003-03-19 |work=michaelrobertson.com }}</ref> [[Theo de Raadt]] of [[OpenBSD]] also claimed that Intel is being "an Open Source fraud" after an Intel employee presented a distorted view of the situation on an open-source conference.<ref name='Theo'> {{cite web|url=http://www.undeadly.org/cgi?action=article&sid=20060930232710&mode=expanded |title=Intel: Only "Open" for Business |accessdate=2007-08-05 |first=Theo de Raadt |date=2006-09-30 |work=undeadly.org |publisher=OpenBSD Journal }}</ref> In spite of the significant negative attention Intel received as a result of the wireless dealings, the binary firmware <!--, as of (please add the date),--> still has not gained a license compatible with free software principles.
According to a July 1998 article in ''[[Le Monde diplomatique]]'', the conflict has weighed heavily on the Turkish state's budget.<ref name="Mondediplo"/> In 1993, a sum of $70m was allocated from the prime minister’s secret funds. According to government inspector Kutlu Savaş, this sum was used mainly for procuring weapons and anti-terrorist equipment from Israel and for external operations. [[Irregular unit]]s in the conflictual zones have had to find ways to finance themselves, including racketeering and secret funding. Sedat Bucak has been alleged by the French newspaper to have under his orders 20,000 men, while the [[village guards]] pro-government Kurdish militias created in the mid-1980s would number to a total of 64,000.<ref name="Mondediplo">{{cite news|url=http://mondediplo.com/1998/07/05turkey |title=Turkey’s pivotal role in the international drug trade|work=Le Monde diplomatique|date=1998-07-05|last=Nezan|first=Kendal}}</ref>


== See also ==
==Competition==
During the 1980s, Intel was among the top ten worldwide semiconductor sales leaders (10th in 1987), dominated by Japanese chip makers. In 1991, Intel achieved the number one ranking and has held it ever since. Other top semiconductor companies include [[AMD]], [[Samsung]], [[Texas Instruments]], [[Toshiba]] and [[STMicroelectronics]]. {{see|Semiconductor sales leaders by year}}
*[[Blackwater USA arms smuggling allegations]]
*[[Human rights of Kurdish people in Turkey]]
*[[Kurds in Turkey]]


Competitors in PC chipsets include [[VIA Technologies]], [[Silicon Integrated Systems|SiS]], [[ATI]], and [[Nvidia]]. Intel's competitors in networking include [[Freescale]], [[Infineon]], [[Broadcom]], [[Marvell Technology Group]] and [[Applied Micro Circuits Corporation|AMCC]], and its competitors in flash memory include [[Spansion]], [[Samsung]], [[Qimonda]], [[Toshiba]], [[STMicroelectronics]], and [[Hynix]].
== References ==
{{Reflist|2}}


The only major competitor to Intel on the [[x86]] processor market is [[Advanced Micro Devices]] (AMD), with which Intel has had full cross-licensing agreements since 1976: each partner can use the other's [[patent]]ed technological innovations without charge after a certain time.<ref name='Intel-AMD deal 2001'>{{cite news |first=Ian |last=Fried |coauthors= |title=Intel, AMD sign new licensing deal |date=[[2001-04-04]] |publisher=CNET Networks, Inc |url=http://news.com.com/2100-1040-257059.html |work=news.com.com |pages= |accessdate=2007-07-28 |language=}}</ref> However, the cross-licensing agreement is canceled in the event of an AMD bankruptcy or takeover.<ref name='Patent Cross License Agreement'>{{cite news |title=Patent Cross License Agreement - Advanced Micro Devices Inc. and Intel Corp. |publisher=Findlaws, Inc |url=http://contracts.corporate.findlaw.com/agreements/amd/intel.license.2001.01.01.html |pages= |accessdate=2007-09-15 |language=}}</ref> Some smaller competitors such as [[VIA Technologies|VIA]] and [[Transmeta]] produce [[low-power]] processors for small factor computers and portable equipment.
==Further reading==


===Lawsuits===
*{{cite web|archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20060630045559/http://www.ict.org.il/organizations/orgdet.cfm?orgid=20| archivedate=2006-06-30|url=http://www.ict.org.il/organizations/orgdet.cfm?orgid=20|publisher=[[International Policy Institute for Counter-Terrorism]] (ICT) |title= Kurdistan Worker's Party (PKK)|accessdate=2007-09-01}}
In September 2005, Intel filed its response to an [[wikinews:AMD files antitrust lawsuit against Intel in US federal district court|AMD lawsuit]],<ref name='Intel response 2005-09-01'>{{cite news |first= |last= |coauthors= |title=Intel Files Response To AMD Complaint |date=[[2005-09-01]] |publisher=Intel Corporation |url=http://www.intel.com/pressroom/archive/releases/20050901corp.htm |work=intel.com (Press release) |pages= |accessdate=2007-07-28 |language=}}</ref> disputing AMD's claims, and stating that its business practices are fair and lawful. In its rebuttal, Intel laid out the skeleton of its legal defense, which included a deconstruction of AMD's offensive strategy and levied the charge that AMD's long struggling market position is largely a result of bad business decisions and management incompetence, including underinvestment in essential manufacturing capacity and over-reliance on contracting out chip foundries.<ref name='Forbes 2005-09-02'>{{cite news |first=David |last=Whelan |coauthors= |title=Intel's Legal Strategy Takes Shape |date=[[2005-09-02]] |url=http://www.forbes.com/technology/2005/09/02/intel-amd-antitrust-cz_dw_0902intel.html |work=[[Forbes]] |pages= |accessdate=2007-07-28}}</ref>
* {{cite web

|url=http://www.turkishweekly.net/articles.php?id=217
Legal experts predict the lawsuit will most likely drag out for a number of years, since Intel's response indicates they are not likely to try to settle with AMD.<ref> {{cite web|url=http://www.amd.com/us-en/assets/content_type/DownloadableAssets/AMD_Intel_Battle.pdf |title=AMD, Intel Battle Wages On As EU Decision Nears |accessdate=2008-01-07 |date=2006-03-20 |format=PDF |work=amd.com |publisher=Portfolio Media, Inc }}</ref><ref name='InfoWorld 2005-09-01'>{{cite news |first=Tom |last=Krazit |coauthors= |title=Update: Intel issues formal response to AMD's antitrust lawsuit |date=[[2005-09-01]] |publisher=IDG News Service |url=http://www.infoworld.com/article/05/09/01/HNintelresponse_1.html |work=infoworld.com |pages= |accessdate=2008-01-07 |language=}}</ref> A court date has been granted in 2010.<ref> {{citeweb|title=Intel, AMD Lawsuit Pushed Off to 2010|url=http://www.eweek.com/c/a/Desktops-and-Notebooks/Intel-AMD-Lawsuit-Pushed-Off-to-2010/|publisher=''[[eWeek]]''|accessdate=2008-06-12}}</ref>
|accessdate=2008-06-29

|work=[[Journal of Turkish Weekly]]
In October 2006, a [[Transmeta#Lawsuit against Intel Corporation|Transmeta lawsuit]] was filed against Intel for patent infringement covering computer architecture and power efficiency technologies.<ref name='Transmeta lawsuit 2006'>{{cite news |first= |last= |coauthors= |title=Transmeta Announces Patent Infringement Lawsuit Against Intel Corporation |date=[[2006-10-11]] |publisher=Transmeta Corporation |url=http://investor.transmeta.com/ReleaseDetail.cfm?ReleaseID=214275 |work=investor.transmeta.com (Press release) |pages= |accessdate=2007-07-28 |language=}}</ref> In October 2007, the Transmeta-Intel lawsuit was settled, with Intel agreeing to pay an initial US$150 million and US$20 million per year for the next 5 years. Both companies agreed to drop lawsuits against each other while Intel was granted a perpetual non-exclusive license to use current and future patented Transmeta technologies in its chips for 10 years.<ref name='Reuters 2007-10-24'>{{cite news |first= |last= |coauthors= |title=Transmeta settles patent suit with Intel |date=[[2007-10-24]] |publisher= |url=http://www.reuters.com/article/technology-media-telco-SP/idUSWNAS782620071024 |work=[[Reuters]]|pages= |accessdate=2007-10-25 |language=}}</ref>
|title=Chronology of the Important Events in the World/PKK Chronology (1976-2006)

|publisher=[[International Strategic Research Organization]]
===Anti-competitive allegations by regulatory bodies===
|date=2007-05-27}}
{{see also|AMD v. Intel}}
====Japan====
In 2005, the company violated [[Japan]]ese Antimonopoly Act, local [[Fair Trade Commission (Japan)|Fair Trade Commission]] concluded. The commission ordered Intel to eliminate discounts that discriminated its competitor [[Advanced Micro Devices]]. To avoid a trial, Intel agreed to comply with the order.<ref>[http://uk.reuters.com/article/technologyNews/idUKL1730607220080718?pageNumber=3&virtualBrandChannel=0 EU files new competition charges against Intel | Technology | Reuters<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref><ref>[http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/europe-files-more-antitrust-complaints/story.aspx?guid={6B204911-970B-468B-9E40-09787DDB4345}&dist=msr_4 Europe files more antitrust complaints against Intel - MarketWatch<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref><ref>[http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/06/20/business/wbjoe21.php Predatory pricing or old-fashioned competition? - International Herald Tribune<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref><ref>[http://news.cnet.com/Intel-to-abide-by-Japan-FTC-recommendations/2100-1014_3-5649589.html Intel to abide by Japan FTC recommendations - CNET News.com<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

====European Union====
In July 2007, the [[European Commission]] formally accused Intel of anti-competitive practices, mostly against its main competitor [[Advanced Micro Devices|AMD]].<ref name='Europa Memo 2007-07-27'>{{cite news |first= |last= |coauthors= |title=Competition: Commission confirms sending of Statement of Objections to Intel |date=2007-07-27 |publisher= |url=http://europa.eu/rapid/pressReleasesAction.do?reference=MEMO/07/314& |work=Official website of the [[European Union]] |pages= |accessdate=2007-07-28}}</ref> The allegations, going back to 2003, include giving preferential prices to computermakers getting most or all [[microprocessor|chips]] from Intel, paying computer makers to delay or cancel the launch of products using AMD chips and providing chips at below cost to governments and educational institutions.<ref name='Reuters 2007-07-27'>{{cite news |first=David |last=Lawsky |coauthors= |title=UPDATE 4-EU says Intel tried to squeeze out Advanced Micro Devices|date=[[2007-07-27]] |publisher=[[Reuters]] |url=http://www.reuters.com/article/governmentFilingsNews/idUSL2783620520070727?sp=true |work=reuters.com |pages= |accessdate=2007-07-28 |language=}}</ref> Intel responded that the allegations were unfounded and instead qualified its market behavior as consumer-friendly.<ref name='BBC Intel 2007-07-27'/> General counsel Bruce Sewell also responded that the Commission had misunderstood some factual assumptions concerning price and manufacturing costs.<ref name='Reuters 2007-07-27 (2)'>{{cite news |first=David |last=Lawsky |coauthors= |title=Intel says EU made errors in antitrust charges |date=[[2007-07-27]] |url=http://www.reuters.com/article/technology-media-telco-SP/idUSL2788098920070727?sp=true |work=[[Reuters]] |pages= |accessdate=2007-07-28 |language=}}</ref>

In February 2008, a spokesman for the company announced that Intel's office in Munich had been raided by European Union competition regulators investigating its business practices. Intel reported that it was cooperating with investigators.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/7241022.stm |date=2008-02-12 |accessdate=2008-02-12 |publisher=[[BBC News]] |title=EU regulator raids Intel offices}}</ref> If found guilty of stifling competition, Intel could be fined up to 10% of its annual revenue.<ref name='BBC Intel 2007-07-27'>{{cite news |first= |last= |coauthors= |title=EU outlines Intel 'market abuse' |date=[[2007-07-27]] |publisher=The BBC |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/6918975.stm |work=[[BBC News]] |pages= |accessdate=2007-07-28 |language=}}</ref> Rival AMD also subsequently launched a website focusing on these allegations.<ref>{{cite news |first=Peter |last=Clarke |coauthors= |title=AMD sets up website to tell "the truth about Intel" |date=[[2007-08-08]] |publisher=CMP Media LLC |url=http://www.eetimes.com/news/latest/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=201303681 |work=eetimes.com |pages= |accessdate=2007-08-09 |language=}}</ref><ref> {{cite web|url=http://breakfree.amd.com/en-us/default.aspx |title=AMD Break Free |accessdate=2007-08-09 |date=2007-07-31 |work=breakfree.amd.com |publisher=Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. }}</ref> In [[June]] 2008 EU has filed new competition charges against Intel.<ref>{{cite web|title=EU files new competition charges against Intel|url=http://uk.reuters.com/article/technologyNews/idUKL1730607220080718|work=[[Reuters]]|date=2008-07-17|accessdate=2008-09-10}}</ref>

====South Korea====
In September 2007, [[South Korea]]n regulators formally accused Intel of breaking antitrust law. The inquiry began in February 2006 when officials raided Intel's South Korean offices. The company risked being fined up to 3% of its annual sales if found guilty.<ref name='iht 2007-09-11'>{{cite news |first= |last= |coauthors= |title=Intel facing antitrust complaint in Korea |date=[[2007-09-11]] |publisher=[[The New York Times Company]] |url=http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/09/11/business/chip.php?WT.mc_id=atomtechnology |work=[[International Herald Tribune]] |pages= |accessdate=2007-09-13 |language=}}</ref> In June 2008, the South Korea's Fair Trade Commission ordered Intel to pay a fine of $25.5 million for taking advantage of its dominant position to offer incentives to major Korean PC manufacturers on the condition of not buying products from rival AMD.<ref name='MarketWatch 2008-06-05'>{{cite news |first=Benjamin |last=Pimentel|coauthors= |title=Intel fined $25.5 million by South Korea |date=[[2008-06-05]] |publisher=[[MarketWatch]] |url=http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/intel-fined-255-million-south/story.aspx?guid={5E548C55-0A59-47BA-8910-96F61A8C23E0}&dist=msr_2 |work=marketwatch.com |pages= |accessdate=2008-07-05 |language=}}</ref>

====United States====
[[New York]] started an investigation of Intel in [[January]] 2008 on whether the company violated antitrust laws in pricing and sales of its microprocessors.<ref>[http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/10/technology/10cnd-chip.html?_r=4&ref=technology&oref=slogin&oref=slogin&oref=slogin&oref=slogin NY Times Advertisement<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> In [[June]] 2008 [[Federal Trade Commission]] opened a formal antitrust investigation for this case.<ref>[http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/07/technology/07chip.html?_r=1&partner=rssnyt&emc=rss&oref=slogin In Turnabout, Antitrust Unit Looks at Intel - NYTimes.com<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>



==Environmental record==
In 2003 there were 1.4 tons of [[carbon tetrachloride]] measured from one of Intel's many acid scrubbers. However, Intel reported zero release of carbon tetrachloride for all of 2003.<ref>[http://www.swop.net/2007/04/4807-corrales-comment-intel-air.html SWOPblogger: 4/8/07 Corrales Comment - Intel Air Pollution Permit Revision Expected<!--Bot-generated title-->]</ref>
Intel's facility in [[Rio Rancho, New Mexico]] overlooks a nearby village, and the hilly contours of its location create a setting for chemical gases heavier than air to move along arroyos and irrigation ditches in that village. This has reportedly led to adverse affects in both animals and humans. Examinations of deceased dogs from the area have returned reports of high levels of [[toluene]], [[hexane]], [[ethylbenzene]], and [[xylene]] isomers in their lungs.<ref>[http://www.corralescomment.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=594&Itemid=2 Corrales Comment - Local Village News, Issues, Events & Ads - Intel Pollution Unresolved<!--Bot-generated title-->]</ref>

In the June-July time frame of 2006, Intel reported that there were [[Volatile organic compound|VOC]] releases of more than 1580 pounds.<ref>[http://www.swop.net/2006/12/intel-pollution-control-shut-down.html SWOPblogger: Intel Pollution Control Shut Down Probed<!--Bot-generated title-->]</ref>

==Classmate PC==
As its contribution to the development of low-cost [[Netbook]] computers, Intel is involved with the development of the [[Classmate PC]].

== See also ==
{{col-begin}}
{{col-2}}
*[[Advanced Micro Devices]] (AMD)
*[[Cyrix]]
*[[x86 architecture]]
*[[Transmeta]]
*[[Intel graphics media accelerator]]
*[[Comparison of Nvidia graphics processing units]]
*[[Comparison of ATI Graphics Processing Units]]
*[[Intel Museum]]
*[[Intel Science Talent Search]]
*[[ASCI Red]]
*[[Justin Rattner]]
*[[List of Intel microprocessors]]
{{col-2}}
*[[List of Intel chipsets]]
*[[List of Intel Pentium 4 microprocessors]]
*[[List of Intel Pentium D microprocessors]]
*[[List of Intel Celeron microprocessors]]
*[[List of Intel Pentium M microprocessors]]
*[[List of Intel Pentium Dual-Core microprocessors]]
*[[List of Intel Xeon microprocessors]]
*[[List of Intel Core microprocessors]]
*[[List of Intel Core 2 microprocessors]]
*[[List of Intel codenames]]
*[[List of Intel manufacturing sites]]
<!--*[[List of Intel fabrication facilities]]-->
{{col-end}}

== References ==
{{reflist|2}}


== External links ==
== External links ==
{{Commonscat|Intel}}
*[http://www.hpg-online.net Hêzên Parastina Gel] (People Defense Forces) A PKK-affiliated organization. {{ku icon}} {{tr icon}} {{en icon}} {{ar icon}} {{de icon}}
*[http://www.intel.com/ Intel website]
*[http://iinnovate.blogspot.com/2007/03/andy-grove-former-ceo-and-chairman-of.html Andy Grove interview by iinnovatecast]
*[http://www.youtube.com/channelintel YouTube Intel Channel]
*{{dmoz|Computers/Companies/Product_Support/Intel/}}
*[http://www.cogmap.com/chart/intel-corporation Intel Organizational Chart Wiki]

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|symbol = INTC
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|hoovers = 13787
}}


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Revision as of 18:40, 10 October 2008

Intel Corporation
Company typePublic (NasdaqINTC, SEHK4335)
IndustrySemiconductors
Founded1968 1
FoundersGordon E. Moore and Robert Noyce
HeadquartersSanta Clara, California (incorporated in Delaware)
 United States
Key people
Paul S. Otellini, CEO
Craig Barrett, Chairman
ProductsMicroprocessors
Flash memory
Motherboard Chipsets
Network Interface Card
Bluetooth Chipsets
RevenueIncrease $38.3 billion USD (2007)[1][2]
Increase $8.2 billion USD (2007)
Increase $7.0 billion USD (2007)
Total assets168,406,000,000 United States dollar (2021) Edit this on Wikidata
Number of employees
86,300 (2007)[3]
Websiteintel.com
Footnotes / references
1Incorporated in California in 1968, reincorporated in Delaware in 1989.[4]

Intel Corporation (NasdaqINTC; SEHK4335) is the world's largest semiconductor company and the inventor of the x86 series of microprocessors, the processors found in most personal computers. Founded on July 18, 1968 as Integrated Electronics Corporation and based in Santa Clara, California, USA, Intel also makes motherboard chipsets, network cards and ICs, flash memory, graphic chips, embedded processors, and other devices related to communications and computing. Founded by semiconductor pioneers Robert Noyce and Gordon Moore, and widely associated with the executive leadership and vision of Andrew Grove, Intel combines advanced chip design capability with a leading-edge manufacturing capability. Originally known primarily to engineers and technologists, Intel's successful "Intel Inside" advertising campaign of the 1990s made it and its Pentium processor household names.

Intel was an early developer of SRAM and DRAM memory chips, and this represented the majority of its business until the early 1980s. While Intel created the first commercial microprocessor chip in 1971, it was not until the success of the personal computer (PC) that this became their primary business. During the 1990s, Intel invested heavily in new microprocessor designs and in fostering the rapid growth of the PC industry. During this period Intel became the dominant supplier of microprocessors for PCs, and was known for aggressive and sometimes controversial tactics in defense of its market position, as well as a struggle with Microsoft for control over the direction of the PC industry.[5][6] The 2007 rankings of the world's 100 most powerful brands published by Millward Brown Optimor showed the company's brand value falling 10 places – from number 15 to number 25.[7]

In addition to its work in semiconductors, Intel has begun research in electrical transmission and generation.[8][9]

Corporate history

Intel headquarters in Santa Clara

Intel was founded in 1968 by Gordon E. Moore (a chemist and physicist) and Robert Noyce (a physicist and co-inventor of the integrated circuit) when they left Fairchild Semiconductor. A number of other Fairchild employees also went on to participate in other Silicon Valley companies. Intel's third employee was Andy Grove,[10] (a chemical engineer), who ran the company through much of the 1980s and the high-growth 1990s. Grove is now remembered as the company's key business and strategic leader. By the end of the 1990s, Intel was one of the largest and most successful businesses in the world.[citation needed]

Origin of the name

At its founding, Gordon Moore and Robert Noyce wanted to name their new company "Moore Noyce". The name, however, sounded remarkably similar to "more noise" — an ill-suited name for an electronics company, since noise is typically associated with bad interference. They then used the name NM Electronics for almost a year, before deciding to call their company INTegrated ELectronics or "Intel" for short. However, Intel was already trademarked by a hotel chain, so they had to buy the rights for that name at the beginning.[11]

Company's evolution

Intel has grown through several distinct phases. At its founding, Intel was distinguished simply by its ability to make semiconductors, and its primary products were static random access memory (SRAM) chips. Intel's business grew during the 1970s as it expanded and improved its manufacturing processes and produced a wider range of products, still dominated by various memory devices.

While Intel created the first microprocessor (Intel 4004) in 1971 and one of the first microcomputers in 1972,[12][13] by the early 1980s its business was dominated by dynamic random access memory chips. However, increased competition from Japanese semiconductor manufacturers had by 1983 dramatically reduced the profitability of this market, and the sudden success of the IBM personal computer convinced then-CEO Grove to shift the company's focus to microprocessors, and to change fundamental aspects of that business model. By the end of the 1980s this decision had proven successful, and Intel embarked on a 10-year period of unprecedented growth as the primary (and most profitable) hardware supplier to the PC industry.

After 2000, growth in demand for high-end microprocessors slowed and competitors garnered significant market share, initially in low-end and mid-range processors but ultimately across the product range, and Intel's dominant position was reduced. In the early 2000s then-CEO Craig Barrett attempted to diversify the company's business beyond semiconductors, but few of these activities were ultimately successful.

In 2005, CEO Paul Otellini reorganized the company to refocus its core processor and chipset business on platforms (enterprise, digital home, digital health, and mobility) which led to the hiring of over 20,000 new employees. In September 2006 due to falling profits, the company announced a restructuring that resulted in layoffs of 10,500 employees or about 10 percent of its workforce by July 2006. Its research lab located at Cambridge University was closed at the end of 2006.

Sale of XScale processor business

On June 27, 2006, the sale of Intel's XScale assets was announced. Intel agreed to sell the XScale processor business to Marvell Technology Group for an estimated $600 million in cash and the assumption of unspecified liabilities. The move is intended to permit Intel to focus its resources on its core x86 and server businesses. The acquisition was completed on November 9, 2006.[14]

Market history

SRAMS and the microprocessor

The company's first products were shift register memory and random-access memory integrated circuits, and Intel grew to be a leader in the fiercely competitive DRAM, SRAM, and ROM markets throughout the 1970s. Concurrently, Intel engineers Marcian Hoff, Federico Faggin, Stanley Mazor and Masatoshi Shima invented the first microprocessor. Originally developed for the Japanese company Busicom to replace a number of ASICs in a calculator already produced by Busicom, the Intel 4004 was introduced to the mass market on November 15, 1971, though the microprocessor did not become the core of Intel's business until the mid-1980s. (Note: Intel is usually given credit with Texas Instruments for the almost-simultaneous invention of the microprocessor.)

From DRAM to microprocessors

In 1983, at the dawn of the personal computer era, Intel's profits came under increased pressure from Japanese memory-chip manufacturers, and then-President Andy Grove drove the company into a focus on microprocessors. Grove described this transition in the book Only the Paranoid Survive. A key element of his plan was the notion, then considered radical, of becoming the single source for successors to the popular 8086 microprocessor.

Until then, manufacture of complex integrated circuits was not reliable enough for customers to depend on a single supplier, but Grove began producing processors in three geographically distinct factories, and ceased licensing the chip designs to competitors such as Zilog and AMD. When the PC industry boomed in the late 1980s and 1990s, Intel was one of the primary beneficiaries.

Intel, x86 processors, and the IBM PC

The integrated circuit from an Intel 8742, an 8-bit microcontroller that includes a CPU running at 12 MHz, 128 bytes of RAM, 2048 bytes of EPROM, and I/O in the same chip.

Despite the ultimate importance of the microprocessor, the 4004 and its successors the 8008 and the 8080 were never major revenue contributors at Intel. As the next processor, the 8086 (and its variant the 8088) was completed in 1978, Intel embarked on a major marketing and sales campaign for that chip nicknamed "Operation Crush", and intended to win as many customers for the processor as possible. One design win was the newly-created IBM PC division, though the importance of this was not fully realized at the time.

IBM introduced its personal computer in 1981, and it was rapidly successful. In 1982, Intel created the 80286 microprocessor, which, two years later, was used in the IBM PC/AT. Compaq, the first IBM PC "clone" manufacturer, in 1985 produced a desktop system based on the faster 80286 processor and in 1986 quickly followed with the first 80386-based system, beating IBM and establishing a competitive market for PC-compatible systems and setting up Intel as a key component supplier.

In 1975 the company had started a project to develop a highly-advanced 32-bit microprocessor, finally released in 1981 as the Intel iAPX 432. The project was too ambitious and the processor was never able to meet its performance objectives, and it failed in the marketplace. Intel extended the x86 architecture to 32 bits instead.[15][16]

386 microprocessor

During this period Andy Grove dramatically redirected the company, closing much of its DRAM business and directing resources to the microprocessor business. Of perhaps greater importance was his decision to "single-source" the 386 microprocessor. Prior to this, microprocessor manufacturing was in its infancy, and manufacturing problems frequently reduced or stopped production, interrupting supplies to customers. To mitigate this risk, these customers typically insisted that multiple manufacturers produce chips they could use to ensure a consistent supply. The 8080 and 8086-series microprocessors were produced by several companies, notably Zilog and AMD. Grove made the decision not to license the 386 design to other manufacturers, instead producing it in three geographically distinct factories in Santa Clara, CA; Hillsboro, OR; and the Phoenix, Arizona suburb of Chandler; and convincing customers that this would ensure consistent delivery. As the success of Compaq's Deskpro 386 established the 386 as the dominant CPU choice, Intel achieved a position of near-exclusive dominance as its supplier. Profits from this funded rapid development of both higher-performance chip designs and higher-performance manufacturing capabilities, propelling Intel to a position of unquestioned leadership by the early 1990s.

486, Pentium, and Itanium

Intel introduced the 486 microprocessor in 1989, and in 1990 formally established a second design team, designing the processors code-named "P5" and "P6" in parallel and committing to a major new processor every two years, versus the four or more years such designs had previously taken. The P5 was earlier known as "Operation Bicycle" referring to the cycles of the processor. The P5 was introduced in 1993 as the Intel Pentium, substituting a trademarked name for the former part number (numbers, like 486, cannot be trademarked). The P6 followed in 1995 as the Pentium Pro and improved into the Pentium II in 1997. New architectures were developed alternately in Santa Clara, California and Hillsboro, Oregon.

The Santa Clara design team embarked in 1993 on a successor to the x86 architecture, codenamed "P7". The first attempt was dropped a year later, but quickly revived in a cooperative program with Hewlett-Packard engineers, though Intel soon took over primary design responsibility. The resulting implementation of the IA-64 64-bit architecture was the Itanium, finally introduced in June 2001. The Itanium's performance running legacy x86 code did not achieve expectations, and it failed to effectively compete with 64-bit extensions to the original x86 architecture, first from AMD (the AMD64), then from Intel itself (the Intel 64 architecture, formerly known as EM64T). As of November 2007, Intel continues to develop and deploy the Itanium.

The Hillsboro team designed the Willamette processor (code-named P67 and P68) which was marketed as the Pentium 4, and later developed the 64-bit extensions to the x86 architecture, present in some versions of the Pentium 4 and in the Intel Core 2 chips. Many chip variants were developed at an office in Haifa, Israel.

Pentium flaw

In June 1994, Intel engineers discovered a flaw in the floating-point math subsection of the Pentium microprocessor. Under certain data dependent conditions, low order bits of the result of floating-point division operations would be incorrect, an error that can quickly compound in floating-point operations to much larger errors in subsequent calculations. Intel corrected the error in a future chip revision, but nonetheless declined to disclose it.[citation needed]

In October 1994, Dr. Thomas Nicely, Professor of Mathematics at Lynchburg College independently discovered the bug, and upon receiving no response from his inquiry to Intel, on October 30 posted a message on the Internet.[17] Word of the bug spread quickly on the Internet and then to the industry press. Because the bug was easy to replicate by an average user (there was a sequence of numbers one could enter into the OS calculator to show the error), Intel's statements that it was minor and "not even an erratum" were not accepted by many computer users. During Thanksgiving 1994, The New York Times ran a piece by journalist John Markoff spotlighting the error. Intel changed its position and offered to replace every chip, quickly putting in place a large end-user support organization. This resulted in a $500 million charge against Intel's 1994 revenue.

Ironically, the "Pentium flaw" incident, Intel's response to it, and the surrounding media coverage propelled Intel from being a technology supplier generally unknown to most computer users to a household name. Dovetailing with an uptick in the "Intel Inside" campaign, the episode is considered by some to have been a positive event for Intel, changing some of its business practices to be more end-user focused and generating substantial public awareness, while avoiding (for most users) a lasting negative impression.[18]

Intel Inside, Intel Systems Division, and Intel Architecture Labs

During this period, Intel undertook two major supporting programs that helped guarantee their processor's success. The first is widely-known: the 1990 "Intel Inside" marketing and branding campaign. This campaign established Intel, which had been a component supplier little-known outside the PC industry, as a household name. The second program is little-known: Intel's Systems Group began, in the early 1990s, manufacturing PC "motherboards", the main board component of a personal computer, and the one into which the processor (CPU) and memory (RAM) chips are plugged. Shortly after, Intel began manufacturing fully-configured "white box" systems for the dozens of PC clone companies that rapidly sprang up. At its peak in the mid-1990s, Intel manufactured over 15% of all PCs, making it the third-largest supplier at the time. By manufacturing leading-edge PC motherboards systems, Intel enabled smaller manufacturers to compete with larger manufacturers, accelerating the adoption of the newest microprocessors and system architecture, including the PCI bus, USB and other innovations. This led to more rapid adoption of each of its new processors in turn.[citation needed]

During the 1990s, Intel's Architecture Lab (IAL) was responsible for many of the hardware innovations of the personal computer, including the PCI Bus, the PCI Express (PCIe) bus, the Universal Serial Bus (USB), Bluetooth wireless interconnect, and the now-dominant architecture for multiprocessor servers. IAL's software efforts met with a more mixed fate; its video and graphics software was important in the development of software digital video, but later its efforts were largely overshadowed by competition from Microsoft. The competition between Intel and Microsoft was revealed in testimony by IAL Vice-President Steven McGeady at the Microsoft antitrust trial.

Another factor contributing to rapid adoption of Intel's processors during this period were the successive release of Microsoft Windows operating systems, each requiring significantly greater processor resources. The releases of Windows 95, Windows 98, and Windows 2000 provided impetus for successive generations of hardware.

Competition, antitrust and espionage

Two factors combined to end this dominance: the slowing of PC demand growth beginning in 2000 and the rise of the low cost PC. By the end of the 1990s, microprocessor performance had outstripped software demand for that CPU power. Aside from high-end server systems and software, demand for which dropped with the end of the "dot-com bubble", consumer systems ran effectively on increasingly low-cost systems after 2000. Intel's strategy of producing ever-more-powerful processors and obsoleting their predecessors stumbled, leaving an opportunity for rapid gains by competitors, notably AMD. This in turn lowered the profitability of the processor line and ended an era of unprecedented dominance of the PC hardware by Intel.[citation needed]

Intel's dominance in the x86 microprocessor market led to numerous charges of antitrust violations over the years, including FTC investigations in both the late 1980s and in 1999, and civil actions such as the 1997 suit by Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) and a patent suit by Intergraph. Intel's market dominance (at one time it controlled over 85% of the market for 32-bit PC microprocessors) combined with Intel's own hardball legal tactics (such as its infamous 338 patent suit versus PC manufacturers)[19] made it an attractive target for litigation, but few of the lawsuits ever amounted to anything.

A case of industrial espionage arose in 1995 that involved both Intel and AMD. Guillermo Gaede, an Argentine formerly employed both at AMD and at Intel's Arizona plant, was arrested for attempting in 1993 to sell the i486 and Pentium designs to AMD and to certain foreign powers.[20] Gaede videotaped data from his computer screen at Intel and mailed it to AMD, which immediately alerted Intel and authorities, resulting in Gaede's arrest. Gaede was convicted and sentenced to 33 months in prison in June 1996.[21][22]

Partnership with Apple

On June 6 2005, Apple CEO Steve Jobs announced that Apple would be transitioning from its long favored PowerPC architecture to the Intel x86 architecture, because the future PowerPC road map was unable to satisfy Apple's needs. The first Macintosh computers containing Intel CPUs were announced on January 10, 2006, and Apple had its entire line of consumer Macs running on Intel processors by early August 2006. The Apple Xserve server was updated to Intel Xeon processors from November 2006, and is offered in a configuration similar to Apple's Mac Pro.[23]

Core 2 Duo advertisement controversy

In 2007, the company released a print advertisement for its Core 2 Duo processor featuring six African American runners appearing to bow down to a Caucasian male inside of an office setting (due to the posture taken by runners on starting blocks). According to Nancy Bhagat, Vice President of Intel Corporate Marketing, the general public found the ad to be "insensitive and insulting".[24] The campaign was quickly pulled and several Intel executives made public apologies on the corporate website.[25]

Corporate affairs

In September 2006, Intel had nearly 100,000 employees and 200 facilities world wide. Its 2005 revenues were $38.8 billion and its Fortune 500 ranking was 49th. Its stock symbol is INTC, listed on the NASDAQ.

Leadership and corporate structure

Robert Noyce was Intel's CEO at its founding in 1968, followed by co-founder Gordon Moore in 1975. Andy Grove became the company's President in 1979 and added the CEO title in 1987 when Moore became Chairman. In 1997 Grove succeeded Moore as Chairman, and Craig Barrett, already company president, took over. On May 18 2005, Barrett handed the reins of the company over to Paul Otellini, who previously was the company president and was responsible for Intel's design win in the original IBM PC. The board of directors elected Otellini CEO, and Barrett replaced Grove as Chairman of the Board. Grove stepped down as Chairman, but is retained as a special adviser.

Current members of the board of directors of Intel are Craig Barrett, Charlene Barshefsky, Susan Decker, James Guzy, Reed Hundt, Paul Otellini, James Plummer, David Pottruck, Jane Shaw, John Thornton, and David Yoffie.[26]

Employment

Intel microprocessor facility in Costa Rica was responsible in 2006 for 20% of Costa Rican exports and 4.9% of the country's GDP.[27]

Intel is not typical of its Silicon Valley counterparts. Its culture is not as relaxed and informal as companies such as Google or Sun Microsystems. It has a fairly strict meritocracy that rewards work generously and does not keep underperforming employees around for very long.[28][29]

The firm promotes very heavily from within, most notably in its executive suite. The company has resisted the trend toward outsider CEOs. Paul Otellini was a 30-year veteran of the company when he assumed the role of CEO. All of his top lieutenants have risen through the ranks after many years with the firm. In many cases, Intel's top executives have spent their entire working careers with Intel, a very rare occurrence in volatile Silicon Valley.

Intel has a mandatory retirement policy for its CEO when they reach age 65, but only one CEO, Barrett, has actually retired at 65. Previous CEOs all retired before reaching that age; Grove retired at 62, while both Robert Noyce and Gordon Moore retired at 58. At 57, Otellini has a long career at the helm ahead of him, assuming he goes until age 65 and performs satisfactorily.

No one has an office; everyone, even Otellini, sits in a cubicle. This is designed to promote egalitarianism among employees, but some new hires have difficulty adjusting to this change. Intel is not alone in this policy. Hewlett-Packard has a similar no-office policy, as does NVIDIA.

Outside of California, the company has facilities in China, Costa Rica, Malaysia, Mexico, Israel, Ireland, India, Philippines, Russia, and Vietnam internationally. In the U.S. Intel employs significant numbers of people in California, Colorado, Massachusetts, Arizona, New Mexico, Oregon, Texas, Washington, and Utah.[30] In Oregon, Intel is the state's largest employer with over 16,000 employees, primarily in Hillsboro.[31] The company is the largest industrial employer in New Mexico while in Arizona the company has over 10,000 employees.

Diversity Initiative

Intel has a Diversity Initiative, including employee diversity groups as well as supplier diversity programs.[32] Like many companies with employee diversity groups, they include groups based on race and nationality as well as sexual identity and religion. In 1994, Intel sanctioned one of the earliest corporate Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender employee groups,[33] and supports a Muslim employees group,[34] a Jewish employees group,[35] and a Bible-based Christian group.[36][37]

Intel received a 100% rating on the first Corporate Equality Index released by the Human Rights Campaign in 2002. It has maintained this rating in 2003 and 2004. In addition, the company was named one of the 100 Best Companies for Working Mothers in 2005 by Working Mother magazine. However, Intel's working practices still face criticism, most notably from Ken Hamidi,[38] a former employee who has been subject to multiple unsuccessful lawsuits from Intel.

Finances

Intel stock price, Nov 1986 - Nov 2006

Intel's market capitalization is $129.34 billion (June 17, 2008). It publicly trades on NASDAQ with the symbol INTC. A widely-held stock, the following indices comprise Intel shares: Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500, NASDAQ-100, SOX (PHLX Semiconductor Sector), and GSTI Software Index.

On July 15, 2008, Intel announced that it had achieved the highest earnings in the history of the company during Q2 2008.[39]

Advertising and brand management

Intel has become one of the world's most recognizable computer brands following its long-running "Intel Inside" campaign. The campaign, which started in 1991,[40] was created by Intel marketing manager Dennis Carter.[41] The five-note jingle was introduced the following year and by its tenth anniversary was being heard in 130 countries around the world.

Intel's old logo
(1968–December 2005)
The well known
Intel Inside slogan
(1990–2003)
File:Intelinsidemodified.PNG
Before its phase-out, the 'Intel Inside' logo was modified to resemble the original Intel logo by lowering the Intel 'e' and changing the typeface.
File:Intel 4c 100tag.svg
Intel's new logo and slogan
(December 2005–Present)

The Intel Inside program was supportive of advertisers and further served to broaden the company's awareness as a key ingredient inside PCs. Intel paid some of the advertiser's costs for an ad that used the "Intel Inside" logo. If the ads did not meet agreed upon requirements, Intel was not obligated to reimburse costs. PC companies advertising products containing Intel chips include the jingle in their film and television advertisements in order to receive the reimbursement.

The Centrino advertising campaign has been hugely successful, leading to the ability to access wireless internet from a laptop becoming linked in consumers' minds to Intel chips.[citation needed] In the UK this has caused some controversy, as the ASA upheld complaints that this was a misleading advert.[42]

In December 2005, Intel phased out the "Intel Inside" campaign in favor of a new logo and the slogan, "Leap ahead". The new logo is clearly inspired by the "Intel Inside" logo.

In 2006, Intel expanded its promotion of open specification platforms beyond Centrino, to include the Viiv media centre PC and the business desktop Intel vPro.

In mid January 2006, Intel announced that they were dropping the long running Pentium name from their processors. The Pentium name was first used to refer to the P5 core Intel processors (Pent refers to the 5 in P5,) and was done to circumvent court rulings that prevent the trademarking of a string of numbers, so competitors could not just call their processor the same name, as had been done with the prior 386 and 486 processors. (Both of which had copies manufactured by both IBM and AMD). They phased out the Pentium names from mobile processors first, when the new Yonah chips, branded Core Solo and Core Duo, were released. The desktop processors changed when the Core 2 line of processors were released.

In March 2007, the Intel logo was shown briefly in one of the scenes of the movie, "The Last Mimzy."

As from 2008, Intel plans to shift the emphasis of its "Intel Inside" campaign from traditional media such as television and print to newer media such as the Internet. Intel will require that a minimum of 35% of the money it provides to the companies in its co-op program be used for online marketing.[43]

Intel's "Intel Inside" campaign has generally been considered to be world class marketing. However, over the years there have been several plays on the Intel branding scheme which have appeared on the web. While such jabs at Intel are obviously beyond the company's ability to control, they do tend to show that not everyone believes that Intel's programs and policies are always world class. For example, there is the popular "evil inside" logo,[44] the ubiquitous picture of a tombstone with "R.I.P Intel Inside"[45]

The famous "D♭  D♭  G♭  D♭  A♭" jingle, sonic logo, tag, audio mnemonic (MP3 file of sonic logo) was written by Walter Werzowa from the Austrian 1980s sampling band Edelweiss.[46]

Open source support

Intel has a significant participation in the open source communities. For example, in 2006 Intel released MIT-licensed X.org drivers for their integrated graphic cards of the i965 family of chipsets. On other occasions, Intel released FreeBSD drivers for some networking cards,[47] available under a BSD-compatible licence, which were also ported to OpenBSD. Intel also released its EFI core named as EDK under a BSD-compatible licence. Intel runs Moblin project and LessWatts.org campaigns.[48]

However, after the release of the wireless products called Intel Pro/Wireless 2100, 2200BG/2225BG/2915ABG and 3945ABG in 2005, Intel was criticized for not granting free redistribution rights for the firmwares that are necessary to be included in the operating systems for the wireless devices to operate.[49] As a result of this, Intel became a target of campaigns to allow free operating systems to include binary firmwares on terms acceptable to the open source community. Linspire-Linux creator Michael Robertson outlined the difficult position that Intel was in releasing to Open Source, as Intel did not want to upset their large customer Microsoft.[50] Theo de Raadt of OpenBSD also claimed that Intel is being "an Open Source fraud" after an Intel employee presented a distorted view of the situation on an open-source conference.[51] In spite of the significant negative attention Intel received as a result of the wireless dealings, the binary firmware still has not gained a license compatible with free software principles.

Competition

During the 1980s, Intel was among the top ten worldwide semiconductor sales leaders (10th in 1987), dominated by Japanese chip makers. In 1991, Intel achieved the number one ranking and has held it ever since. Other top semiconductor companies include AMD, Samsung, Texas Instruments, Toshiba and STMicroelectronics.

Competitors in PC chipsets include VIA Technologies, SiS, ATI, and Nvidia. Intel's competitors in networking include Freescale, Infineon, Broadcom, Marvell Technology Group and AMCC, and its competitors in flash memory include Spansion, Samsung, Qimonda, Toshiba, STMicroelectronics, and Hynix.

The only major competitor to Intel on the x86 processor market is Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), with which Intel has had full cross-licensing agreements since 1976: each partner can use the other's patented technological innovations without charge after a certain time.[52] However, the cross-licensing agreement is canceled in the event of an AMD bankruptcy or takeover.[53] Some smaller competitors such as VIA and Transmeta produce low-power processors for small factor computers and portable equipment.

Lawsuits

In September 2005, Intel filed its response to an AMD lawsuit,[54] disputing AMD's claims, and stating that its business practices are fair and lawful. In its rebuttal, Intel laid out the skeleton of its legal defense, which included a deconstruction of AMD's offensive strategy and levied the charge that AMD's long struggling market position is largely a result of bad business decisions and management incompetence, including underinvestment in essential manufacturing capacity and over-reliance on contracting out chip foundries.[55]

Legal experts predict the lawsuit will most likely drag out for a number of years, since Intel's response indicates they are not likely to try to settle with AMD.[56][57] A court date has been granted in 2010.[58]

In October 2006, a Transmeta lawsuit was filed against Intel for patent infringement covering computer architecture and power efficiency technologies.[59] In October 2007, the Transmeta-Intel lawsuit was settled, with Intel agreeing to pay an initial US$150 million and US$20 million per year for the next 5 years. Both companies agreed to drop lawsuits against each other while Intel was granted a perpetual non-exclusive license to use current and future patented Transmeta technologies in its chips for 10 years.[60]

Anti-competitive allegations by regulatory bodies

Japan

In 2005, the company violated Japanese Antimonopoly Act, local Fair Trade Commission concluded. The commission ordered Intel to eliminate discounts that discriminated its competitor Advanced Micro Devices. To avoid a trial, Intel agreed to comply with the order.[61][62][63][64]

European Union

In July 2007, the European Commission formally accused Intel of anti-competitive practices, mostly against its main competitor AMD.[65] The allegations, going back to 2003, include giving preferential prices to computermakers getting most or all chips from Intel, paying computer makers to delay or cancel the launch of products using AMD chips and providing chips at below cost to governments and educational institutions.[66] Intel responded that the allegations were unfounded and instead qualified its market behavior as consumer-friendly.[67] General counsel Bruce Sewell also responded that the Commission had misunderstood some factual assumptions concerning price and manufacturing costs.[68]

In February 2008, a spokesman for the company announced that Intel's office in Munich had been raided by European Union competition regulators investigating its business practices. Intel reported that it was cooperating with investigators.[69] If found guilty of stifling competition, Intel could be fined up to 10% of its annual revenue.[67] Rival AMD also subsequently launched a website focusing on these allegations.[70][71] In June 2008 EU has filed new competition charges against Intel.[72]

South Korea

In September 2007, South Korean regulators formally accused Intel of breaking antitrust law. The inquiry began in February 2006 when officials raided Intel's South Korean offices. The company risked being fined up to 3% of its annual sales if found guilty.[73] In June 2008, the South Korea's Fair Trade Commission ordered Intel to pay a fine of $25.5 million for taking advantage of its dominant position to offer incentives to major Korean PC manufacturers on the condition of not buying products from rival AMD.[74]

United States

New York started an investigation of Intel in January 2008 on whether the company violated antitrust laws in pricing and sales of its microprocessors.[75] In June 2008 Federal Trade Commission opened a formal antitrust investigation for this case.[76]


Environmental record

In 2003 there were 1.4 tons of carbon tetrachloride measured from one of Intel's many acid scrubbers. However, Intel reported zero release of carbon tetrachloride for all of 2003.[77] Intel's facility in Rio Rancho, New Mexico overlooks a nearby village, and the hilly contours of its location create a setting for chemical gases heavier than air to move along arroyos and irrigation ditches in that village. This has reportedly led to adverse affects in both animals and humans. Examinations of deceased dogs from the area have returned reports of high levels of toluene, hexane, ethylbenzene, and xylene isomers in their lungs.[78]

In the June-July time frame of 2006, Intel reported that there were VOC releases of more than 1580 pounds.[79]

Classmate PC

As its contribution to the development of low-cost Netbook computers, Intel is involved with the development of the Classmate PC.

See also

References

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