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Intel HQ |
LAS VEGAS - Manufacturers of chip Intel introduced the latest generation of faster processors. This chip is believed to deter piracy of movies and quickly handle data-rich content such as videos and games.
The second generation of Intel Core processors, called by the name Sandy Bridge, a computer can be embedded in large and small. Even Intel has been exhibited in the event the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) this week.
"This is the best product we've ever developed. We have stepped into the graphics processor," said Intel CEO Paul Otellini was quoted as saying by the Straits Times, Thursday (06/01/2011).
By Sandy Bridge, continued Otellini, Intel has built into the computer graphics chip that can handle games, pictures and videos at a time when lifestyle began to rise and move into online entertainment, filled with the data sent to the virtual world.
"Currently we have been dependent on the Internet. PC is no longer the expensive stuff but a necessity," said Intel VP Shmuel "Mooly" Eden, Sandy Bridge while introducing performance in a computer.
Sandy Bridge processor itself is eagerly awaited by the film industry in Hollywood and Bollywood to prevent the rampant movie piracy in cyberspace. During these two industries are different from those countries experiencing the same problem in dealing with pirated movies. Many of the films made by studios in the U.S. and India are always copied without permission.
Intel also has been working with the majority of film studios in the U.S. and India to immerse technology intellectual property protection, especially for the film, into the chip. Some studios are committed to supporting Intel is Warner Brothers, Dreamworks, Yash Raj Films and 20th Century Fox.
"This year, Sandy Bridge will be present at around 500 devices, ranging from mobile phones, notebooks, up to a desktop computer. Sandy Bridge is also expected to contribute approximately one third of Intel's total revenue earned this year. As well as producing approximately USD125 billion in revenue for the PC industry, "said Otellini.