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Nonetheless, almost everyone agrees that U.S. chipmakers needed emergency relief. In a slump for two years, the industry has laid off 65,000 workers and is expected to post total operating losses of $800 million this year. Even the most innovative stars have been humbled. Earlier this month Intel startled Wall Street by posting a record quarterly loss of $114.2 million. Advanced Micro Devices said it lost $46.9 million during the comparable quarter and announced its first layoffs in a decade, dismissing 500 of its 13,300 workers. Many smaller companies that have developed highly advanced manufacturing processes, notably...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Feeling the Crunch From Foreign Chips | 10/27/1986 | See Source »

...have unwittingly spawned the clones. When the company began producing its first personal computer in 1981, it designed the machine around two widely available components, the Microsoft Disk Operating System (MS DOS) and the Intel 8088 microprocessor chip. Reason: IBM wanted to use standard equipment so that software companies would write programs for its computer. The only element of the PC that IBM copyrighted was the integrated circuit called the Basic Input Output System (BIOS), which controlled how the software interacted with the hardware. But by building circuits that simulated the BIOS, enterprising computer jocks created machines that could legally...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cut-Rate Computers, Get 'Em Here | 7/21/1986 | See Source »

Doerr has shown talent at that ever since his days at Rice University in Houston, where he earned a master's degree in electrical engineering. He started a computer-software company during his sophomore year. While picking up an M.B.A. at Harvard, Doerr worked 20 hours a week at Intel, the & semiconductor firm. When he has time, Doerr relaxes with his wife Ann in their fashionable Pacific Heights home, and he declares himself "more interested in making new technology successful than in the technology itself...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: It's an Addictive Life | 6/16/1986 | See Source »

Thinking Machines Corp. is not the only game in town. BBN, Intel and Floating Point Systems have shipped parallel-processing computers that are nearly as ambitious, and a pair of start-up companies, Encore and Sequent, are finding a ready market for more modest parallel machines. Meanwhile, research teams across the U.S. are experimenting with even more radical designs. Among them: AT&T Bell Laboratories computer circuits that mimic the action of the billions of neurons in the human brain. "It's a time for experimentation," says Illinois' Smarr. "There are 1,000 flowers blooming...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Computers: Letting 1,000 Flowers Bloom | 6/9/1986 | See Source »

...chief rival is Ethernet, a system first devised eleven years ago by Xerox and adopted by such companies as Digital Equipment and Intel. Ethernet already has 30,000 users and costs only about $500 per connection, compared with the $800 that IBM is expected to cost. Another competitor, American Telephone and Telegraph, has introduced three networks...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Getting in Touch with One Another | 10/28/1985 | See Source »

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