Intel
Intel Corporation is a semiconductor and computing technology company that designs and manufactures processors, platforms, and related hardware and software for data centers, client computing, networking, and edge deployments.
- Central Processing Unit (CPU) and platform architectures for data center, cloud, and enterprise workloads
- Client computing processors and platforms for business Process Control System (PCS), laptops, and workstations
- Accelerated computing, GPUs, and AI-focused hardware and software stacks
- Network, edge, and Internet of Things (IoT) compute solutions for on-premises (on-prem) and distributed environments
- Silicon manufacturing, process technology, and packaging services for internal and external customers
More About Intel
Intel focuses on x86-based CPU architectures and related platform technologies that support enterprise and institutional IT environments across data center, cloud, and client computing scenarios. Its server and data center processors (compute infrastructure) are used in on-prem data centers, private clouds, and public cloud infrastructure to run enterprise applications, databases, analytics platforms, and virtualized workloads. These processors typically integrate multi-core designs, hardware-assisted virtualization features, and security extensions aimed at predictable performance and workload isolation.
In client computing, Intel supplies processors and chipsets (endpoint computing) for business desktops, laptops, and workstations used in corporate fleets, Virtual Desktop Infrastructure (VDI) endpoints, engineering workstations, and productivity devices. These platforms often incorporate integrated graphics, power management features, and support for enterprise security and manageability frameworks, including capabilities that integrate with Operating System (OS) security controls and fleet management tooling used by IT departments.
Intel also develops GPUs and accelerators (accelerated computing, Artificial Intelligence (AI) infrastructure) that are used for High performance computing (HPC), AI inferencing and training, and data analytics. These offerings are typically positioned alongside CPUs in heterogeneous compute architectures, using software frameworks, SDKs, and libraries that support common AI and HPC toolchains. Intel software stacks in this area are designed to expose parallelism and hardware capabilities to developers through standardized programming models and open-source frameworks.
For networking and edge computing, Intel provides processors, network adapters, and edge platforms (network and edge infrastructure) that support SDN/NFV workloads, secure gateways, industrial PCS, and IoT gateways. These products are commonly used in telecom networks, enterprise branch infrastructure, and industrial or retail edge deployments. Intel technologies in this area often support protocols and standards associated with Ethernet, IP networking, virtualization, and container-based workloads, enabling consolidation of network functions and data processing closer to where data is generated.
Intel operates its own semiconductor fabrication facilities and offers foundry and packaging services (semiconductor manufacturing services) to both internal product groups and external customers. The company invests in process nodes, 3D packaging, and interconnect technologies that are used to build CPUs, GPUs, and other SoCs. This manufacturing capability is closely tied to its platform roadmaps, allowing alignment between process technology and the performance, power, and density characteristics required by enterprise and cloud-scale deployments.
Across these areas, Intel positions its offerings for integration into standard enterprise architectures involving virtualization platforms, container orchestration systems, major operating systems, and cloud service environments. Its hardware platforms commonly support widely used interfaces and technologies such as PCI Express (PCIe), Double Data Rate (DDR) memory standards, Ethernet, various storage interfaces, and instruction set extensions for cryptography, vector processing, and AI workloads. For directory and taxonomy purposes, Intel aligns with categories such as compute infrastructure (CPUs and platforms), endpoint computing (business PCS and workstations), AI infrastructure (accelerators and software stacks), network and edge infrastructure (edge compute and networking components), and semiconductor manufacturing services (foundry and packaging).