INTEL TIMELINE

By a6187RR
  • Company Logo

    Company Logo
    Intel is founded by Robert Noyce and Gordon Moore, who had both left Fairchild Semiconductor.
  • Competition

    Advanced Micro Devices is founded by Jerry Sanders. This company would become the second-largest supplier and only significant rival to Intel in the market for x86-based microprocessors.
  • Products

    Products
    Intel comes out with its 3rd product, the Intel 1103, which put Intel on the map.
  • Company

    Company
    Intel goes IPO at a price of $23.50 a share. At 350,000 shares, this sums to a total of $8.225M.
  • Product

    Product
    Intel launches its first microprocessor, the 4004.
  • Product

    Product
    Intel announces the first 8-bit microprocessor, the 8008.
  • Product

    Product
    Intel launches the Intel 8080 microprocessor, the first general-purpose microprocessor, featuring 4,500 transistors.[4] This finally kickstarts computer development.
  • Product

    Product
    Intel launches the Intel MCS-48 series of microcontrollers, the world's first microcontrollers (which combine a CPU with memory, peripherals, and input-output functions).
  • Product

    Product
    Intel introduces the 8086 16-bit microprocessor, which becomes the industry standard (for the x86 instruction set).
  • Product

    Product
    Intel launches "Operation Crush", a campaign to establish the 8086 as the standard for the 16-bit microprocessor market (which was competing with the technically superior Motorola 68000). This finally convinces IBM to adopt the 8086 in its upcoming personal computer.
  • Product

    Product
    Intel and Xerox introduce the cooperative Ethernet project.
  • Product

    Product
    Intel launches the 16-bit Intel 286 microprocessor, which features 134,000 transistors and is built into many PCs.
  • Product

    Product
    Intel launches CHMOS technology, which increases chip performance while decreasing power consumption.
  • Product

    Product
    Intel announces the world's first CHMOS DRAMs, which have densities as high as 256K.
  • Product

    Product
    Intel enters the parallel supercomputer business and introduces the iPSC/1.
  • Product

    Product
    Intel launches (and sole-sources) the 80386 processor, a 32-bit chip that incorporates 275K transistors and can run multiple software programs at once.
  • Partnerships

    Partnerships
    Compaq buys the 386 for its Deskpro personal computer. Compaq was one of several IBM clones that would adopt Intel processors, which shifted control of the computing industry from IBM to Intel.
  • Legal

    Legal
    The US-Japan Semiconductor Trade Agreement is signed, opening up Japanese markets to US semiconductor markets.
  • Product

    Product
    Intel introduces the 80486 microprocessor, which it sole-sources for 4 years. This offers backwards compatibility
  • Marketing

    Marketing
    Intel launches the "Red X" marketing campaign by discrediting its original 16-bit and 8-bit products, in order to encourage more people to adopt 32-bit computing
  • Team

    Team
    Robert Noyce suddenly dies from a heart attack
  • Competition

    Competition
    Intel loses its suit against AMD. This loss allows AMD to create clones of the 386 processor.
  • Product

    Intel decides that it will stick with CISC architecture, and cuts off support for RISC architecture, which was internally developed by Les Kohn.
  • Company

    Company
    Intel starts the Intel Inside marketing campaign
  • Competition

    Competition
    Intel becomes the top-ranked seller for semiconductor sales. It has retained its top ranking ever since.
  • Product

    Product
    Intel launches the Pentium processor, which has 3.1 million transistors, initial speeds of 60 MHz, features an integrated floating-point unit, and is built on a 0.8 micron bi-CMOS process.
  • Product

    Product
    Intel suffers a public relations disaster when CNN publicized the story that there was a flaw in the way that the Pentium chip did division. Intel argued that the flaw was irrelevant, but then IBM halted shipments of Pentium-based computers, forcing Intel to reverse course and offer a no-questions-asked return policy
  • Product

    Product
    Intel launches the Pentium Pro processor, a high-performance chip targeted for 32-bit workstations.
  • Product

    Product
    Intel launches the Pentium MMX product line
  • Product

    Product
    Intel launches the Pentium II line of processors, which is Intel's sixth-generation microarchitecture (P6)
  • Company

    Company
    Intel wins sponsorship rights to the Westinghouse Science Talent Search.
  • Product

    Product
    Intel rolls out the Intel Pentium II Xeon processor, Intel's new high-end solution for the workstation and server markets.
  • Product

    Product
    Intel launches the first processor for the budget PC market segment, the Intel Celeron processor
  • Product

    Product
    Intel launches the Pentium III generation of microprocessors, which features the addition of the SSE instruction set (to accelerate floating point and parallel calculations)
  • Company

    Company
    The Dow Jones Industrial Average adds Intel to its list.
  • Company

    Company
    Intel launches Intel Research.
  • Product

    Product
    Intel introduces the Pentium 4 processor, with an initial speed of 1.5 GHz.
  • Legal, competition

    Legal, competition
    Intel and Advanced Micro Devices make a patent cross-license agreement between the companies
  • Product

    	Product
    Intel introduces Centrino processor technology for laptop PCs, which made wireless compatibility a standard for laptop computers.
  • Product

    Product
    Intel announces that it will implement its first 64-bit processor, and releases the Nocona on June 2004
  • Legal, competition

    Legal, competition
    AMD files lawsuit against Intel, claiming that Intel engaged in unfair competition by offering rebates to Japanese PC manufacturers who agreed to eliminate or limit purchases of microprocessors made by AMD or a smaller manufacturer, Transmeta. On November 2009, Intel agrees to pay AMD $1.25 billion in a settlement.
  • Product Logo

    Product Logo
    Intel launches the Core 2 Duo processor, which marks its transition into dual core processors. Intel releases a new logo
  • Competition

    Competition
    Qualcomm launches the first Snapdragon system on a chip semiconductor product, which included the first 1 GHz processor for mobile phones. By 2011, Snapdragon achieves 50% market share of the smartphone processor market
  • Product

    Product
    Intel announces the Intel Atom, a line of low-power, low-cost and low-performance x86 and x86-64 microprocessors that can be used for smartphones and tablets.
  • Product

    Product
    Intel announces the Nehalem microprocessor, which represents the new Core i7 brand of high-end microprocessors to replace the Core 2 Duo microprocessors.
  • Legal

    Legal
    Intel pays Advanced Micro Devices $1.25 billion in a settlement over AMD's assertion that Intel rewarded computer makers that used only Intel chips and punished those who bought from AMD
  • Product

    Product
    Intel announces the Sandy Bridge series of i7 microprocessors to replace Nehalem. Sandy Bridge microprocessors start out as quad-core
  • Product

    Product
    Intel announces that it will put the first 3D transistors. into high-volume production (the structure it invented is called "Tri-Gate")
  • Intel releases the next-generation lineup of desktop and mobile processors in the Core i3, i5, and i7 family – known as Haswell.

    Intel releases the next-generation lineup of desktop and mobile processors in the Core i3, i5, and i7 family – known as Haswell.
    Intel releases the next-generation lineup of desktop and mobile processors in the Core i3, i5, and i7 family – known as Haswell.
  • Product

    Product
    Intel announces the Intel Quark, a tiny chip that can power Internet of things and wearable devices.
  • Product

    Product
    Intel announces withdrawal from smartphone market
  • Product Logo

    Product Logo
    Intel and all its products (except the ones that were discontinued or never got a new logo) get a new logo