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Intel has officially abandoned its plans to build a mega lab in Hillsboro, Oregon. The Oregonian received a statement today saying that the $700M facility will not be built. The Oregonian said ...
Whether these purported lay offs are part of Intel's previously stated plans to trim staff, or if this latest cull means that ...
Gelsinger, 59, spent 30 years at Intel and was among its top engineers and top Oregon executives when he left the company in 2009. He became VMware’s CEO in 2012.
Oregon: Intel inside. Updated: Oct. 19, 2010, 11:54 p.m. | ... View full size Illustration courtesy of Intel Corp. Intel's planned D1X fab at Ronler Acres. Tuesday was a great day in Hillsboro, ...
Last week, chipmaker Intel — which employs more than 20,000 people in Oregon — told investors it would cut more than 15,000 positions from its global workforce, or roughly 15% of its workers.
Intel is laying off around 1,300 workers in Oregon. The layoffs affect workers at all four of Intel’s Oregon campuses, according to a WARN notice posted online .
Wants to head to the Far EastChipzilla is apparently thinking about moving leading edge production from Oregon to Asia and hiring one of its top rivals to make Intel's most advanced chips. A ...
Oregon can still count on being a key part of Intel's hypothetical post-breakup future, Rogoway added. The company operates a big design group in the Portland area, including its advanced D1X ...
Intel -- one of Oregon's latest private corporate employers with its site in Hillsboro -- said it will permanently lay off roughly 1,300 of its in-state workforce by next month. File Photo by Terry ...
Intel plans to layoff approximately 1,300 employees from its campuses in Aloha and Hillsboro starting on Nov. 15. The tech giant, ... 1,300 Oregon Intel employees set to be laid off.
Intel has opened a $3 billion factory expansion at its Ronler Acres campus in Hillsboro, Oregon. And it is renaming the campus in honor of Intel’s cofounder Gordon Moore. The expansion of the ...
They were stung by Intel's decision last year to build a massive $20 billion chipmaking complex in Ohio, and not in Oregon where suitable zoned land is scarce.