Intel Hybrid Cloud program

Intel Hybrid Cloud program offers your small business customers cloud-like flexibility, with the confidence of onsite hardware.

The Intel Hybrid Cloud program, featuring the Intel AppUp Small Business Service, enables you to provide customers with server software and services on a pay-as-you-go basis, along with the stability and confidence of on-premises hardware. You get a turnkey, remotely manageable cloud solution and your customers receive the benefits of cloud-based services combined with the responsiveness and security of local hardware.

The Intel AppUp Small Business Service, an innovative software delivery mechanism and catalog of small business applications, runs on the Intel Hybrid Cloud platform, which features a scalable, pre-configured server with robust remote management capabilities. The Intel Hybrid Cloud platform also includes the Intel Hybrid Cloud software, server, and management portal. The Intel AppUp Small Business Service enables you to deliver cloud-like benefits with flexibility, confidence and a better user experience for your small business customers. Read the rest of this entry »

Intel’s profit down by 90% despite Atom boost.

The chip-making giant made just $234 million (£158 million) profit on sales of $8.2 billion (£5.5 billion) in the last quarter of 2008: that’s a tenth of the money it made the previous quarter, or the same time last year.

Part of that is down to a $1 billion (£675 million) investment in WiMax mobile broadband company Clearwire, but there’s no doubt the processor manufacturer has been hit by the economic downturn

“The economy and the industry are in the process of re-setting to a new baseline from which to grow,” guessed Paul Otellini, President and CEO of Intel.

“Intel has weathered difficult times in the past. Our new technologies and new products will help us thrive when the economy recovers.”

Two glimmers of hope: revenue from Intel Atom processors and chipsets was $300 million (£200 million), up 50 per cent on previous quarters. And excluding the bargain basement Atom chips, the average selling price of processors was actually up in the Q4 2008.

Looking into 2009, Intel is not even speculating about potential profits, although it has said that it expects to sell about $7 billion (£4.8 billion) worth of processors in Q1 2009.

Due to economic uncertainty, the company declined to provide a Q1 revenue forecast, although it is planning on $7 billion for internal purposes, while the gross margin could drop to 40 percent as the company pays for development costs related to 32nm manufacturing.