U.S. chip giant Intel has entered the 5G base station chip race with bold ambitions to be the market leader by 2021 in a bid to help telecom equipment maker Ericsson and other key partners take on Chinese rival Huawei Technologies.
— H Ahmed (@Amexken) February 24, 2020
https://t.co/oJs7gVtlYD #Huawei #5G #Intel
.@intel debuts 5G server and base station chips, plus a PC network card
— Fabrizio Bustamante (@Fabriziobustama) February 24, 2020
By @VentureBeathttps://t.co/7wXqv2kgrL#Technology #AI #5G #CPU #ArtificailIntelligence #IoT
Cc: @MikeQuindazzi @fogle_shane @archonsec @CaseyCRL @digitalcloudgal @avrohomg @DrJDrooghaag @mclynd @gvalan pic.twitter.com/EYEEmLfsIR
(๑ÒωÓ๑)フムフム...
— NANA☃️令和2年生まれ (@NANA_CoRRiENTE) February 24, 2020
Intel debuts 5G server and base station chips, plus a PC network card https://t.co/cTuBWd4L0k
Intel is making special chips for 5G, hoping that Ericsson and Nokia will use them. I am assuming that US intelligence have backdoors in these American chips! ??#Huawei #China https://t.co/CceekL30dw
— CaliCali2000 (@CaliCali2000) February 25, 2020
Some very important Not at #MWC20 announcements from @Intel today. Aggressive but achievable goal of gaining 40% of basestation silicon by 2021. Intel debuts 5G server and base station chips, plus a PC network card https://t.co/0V9LKzxEjl $INTC #5G #Telco pic.twitter.com/5cvkHf0PZc
— Daniel Newman (@danielnewmanUV) February 25, 2020