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All Intel Processors Will Now Be Free of 'Conflict Minerals'

Shapiro briefly stumbled over Intel CEO Brian Krzanich's name but laughed a quickly recovered.
Our first glimpse of Intel's Smart Watch
Krzanich shows off the new Einstein chip.
Here are the specs on the Einstein SOC.
Intel's charging bowl concept lets you drop devices into the bowl where they charge without wires.
Intel scanned their mascot using a 3D-scanning-ready tablet (coming later this year).
This is Nursery 2.0
The turtle has Einstein inside.
This onesie is covered in sensors.
These cups communicate wirelessly with other smart devices and can tell you what's going on via embedded LEDs.
With all those sensors and smarts, Nursery 2.0 can ell you a lot about the state of your baby.
Itel is making it's McAfee mobile security free for all in 2014.
Intel's CEO said the company wants to make a difference by removing conflict minerals from its products.
This Nursery can almost run itself.
It can GeoFence.
If you can design the next generation of attractive, wearable tech, you might be able to win a prize.
Intel CeO Brian Krzanich and Dreamworks's Jeffrey Katzenberg. Katzenberg showed a clip from Mr. Peabody
These earphones do more than deliver sound.
These young people all work at and/or with Intel.
LAS VEGAS — Intel's ability to put its technology inside laptops, desktops, phones and now tablets is well-known, but the next frontier for the venerable technology giant is putting Intel inside everything else. Freshly-minted CEO Brian Krzanich revealed the company's ambitious plans to "make everything smart" — and naturally, it all starts with Einstein.
Einstein, a new SD card-size system on a chip (or, as Krzanich described it, "a Pentium Class PC the size of an SD card"), was unveiled during the opening CES keynote in Las Vegas on Sunday. It can live inside common household objects like cups, bottle warmers or even babies' onesies.

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The ultra-low-power device runs Linux, comes with built-in Wi-Fi and has access to an app store. Krzanich showed a scenario with a baby wearing a onesie with a sensor, which he called "Nursery 2.0." An Einstein-enabled turtle — yes, a little plastic turtle — communicated not only with the onesie, but also with nearby objects like a smart cup that could let parents know the baby's condition using LED lights. The cup, in turn, could communicate with a bottle warmer. When the baby thrashed about, the cup would let the bottle warmer know, so it could start heating up the baby's bottle.

Sounds a little like the future, right? Krzanich said Einstein should start shipping in mid-2014. Krzanich also stated that Intel's microprocessors shipping in 2014 would be conflict-mineral free.
Intel is also moving into the wearables category. Krzanich announced a broad partnership with the fashion industry and designers from Barney's to create the next generation of wearable technology.

The company debuted several new products: Smart earbuds that measure heart rate and activity, powered through an audio jack; Jarvis, a smart headset worn like glasses that attach to one ear like Google Glass; and a smartwatch capable of geofencing (no pricing or availability was announced).

The company is also trying to move wearable device technology forward by attracting new blood. Intel announced a new competition for wearable design, which is open to the public and includes a $1.3 million prize for the best design idea.

Intel and Microsoft have a long-standing friendship. In fact, the term WinTel was commonly used to indicate the extent of the partnership. If you bought a Windows machine, it had Intel inside. That's still mostly true now, but Windows products also run on ARM CPU's from companies like Nvidia.

Intel is proving that it can do more than simply power Windows machines. During his keynote, Krzanich said Intel didn’t want to limit corporate options for laptops. Intel's new Dual OS technology lets people switch between Windows and Android with the push of a button; during the demonstration, it took a button push and a few seconds for the switch.

Krzanich, who has only been Intel's CEO for six months, has proved himself a sure hand — at least compared to last year's rather uneven keynote from Qualcomm CEO Paul Jacobs.
Image: Mashable

সোর্স: http://mashable.com/

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