“Twenty, 30 years ago, we are really the leader,” Tan said during a conversation broadcast to Intel employees around the world. “Now I think the world has changed. We are not in the top 10 semiconductor companies.”
Intel’s turnaround will be a “marathon,” Tan said, describing the layoffs that began this week as an effort to make Intel more like rivals Nvidia, Broadcom and AMD, which Tan considers faster and more agile.
“We have to be humble,” Tan said, exhorting staff to listen to customers and respond to their needs. The Oregonian/OregonLive reviewed a recording of his comments.
“There’s a lot of work to do,” Tan said, noting Intel’s loss of market share in data centers. He said its PC business is “doing a bit better,” but he said Intel needs to strengthen its architecture to meet the demands of advanced computing.
“On training I think it is too late for us,” Tan said. He said Nvidia’s position in that market is simply “too strong.”
“Our number one priority is to make sure that our 18A is robust for our internal customer,” Intel’s own processors, Tan said this week. “And then second priority is starting to look at another, 14A, and that’s the next frontier.”
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Intel’s turnaround will be a “marathon,” Tan said, describing the layoffs that began this week as an effort to make Intel more like rivals Nvidia, Broadcom and AMD, which Tan considers faster and more agile.
“We have to be humble,” Tan said, exhorting staff to listen to customers and respond to their needs. The Oregonian/OregonLive reviewed a recording of his comments.
“There’s a lot of work to do,” Tan said, noting Intel’s loss of market share in data centers. He said its PC business is “doing a bit better,” but he said Intel needs to strengthen its architecture to meet the demands of advanced computing.
“On training I think it is too late for us,” Tan said. He said Nvidia’s position in that market is simply “too strong.”
“Our number one priority is to make sure that our 18A is robust for our internal customer,” Intel’s own processors, Tan said this week. “And then second priority is starting to look at another, 14A, and that’s the next frontier.”

Intel’s CEO: ‘We are not in the top 10’ of leading chip companies
"I think is too late for us" to catch up with Nvidia's position in AI, said Lip-Bu Tan. But he said Intel has other opportunities in the field.