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Intel Confirms Major Layoff: 12,000 Worldwide, 11 Percent of Workforce (ieee.org)

Tekla Perry writes: It's all about the cloud and the Internet of Things, says Intel explaining the planned layoffs, which will affect some 12,000 employees. Intel CEO Brian Krzanich promises in an email today to employees, that the "transition" will be handled with the "utmost dignity and respect." According to IEEE Spectrum, "Intel Corp. today announced that it would cut some 12,000 jobs -- that's 11 percent of its total workforce -- by mid-2017, with the majority of those affected getting the bad news within the next two months. In a press release, the company said the 'restructuring initiative' would 'accelerate its evolution from a PC company to one that powers the cloud and the billions of smart, connected computing devices,' and that the company would be increasing its investments in 'data center, IoT memory, and connectivity businesses.'"

10 of 238 comments (clear)

  1. "It's all about the cloud and Internet of Things" by JoeyRox · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Cloud = Their core market (desktop+server CPUs) is in a deep consolidation phase where future purchases will be made by a relatively few number of large cloud players and total unit volumes will be drastically lower.

    Internet of Things = Intel is being forced to chase razor-thin margins just to have a new market to soak up their excess semiconductor production capacity.

  2. Who needs employees when you have diversity? by PseudoCoder · · Score: 4, Interesting

    $300 Million because Diversity(TM) http://fortune.com/2015/01/12/...

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    1. Re:Who needs employees when you have diversity? by rmdingler · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Chief Diversity Officer is a genuine position at Intel.

      Not making even a single judgement call, but is some unanticipated overhead, right?

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  3. Times and tech are changing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Intel has to restructure. It's too bad that they couldn't move some of those employees over to the growing parts of the business. Intel's business is kind of a niche one. Where will those laid off employees go? AMD? Motorola? And that's assuming that they need people.

    And when Yahoo! starts their fire sale, there will be re-orgs there as well as layoffs and it will flood the market with even more tech people.

    There are some bad times coming to Silicon Valley.

  4. Another DotCom-type crash may be good for SV. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It's not that we want people to lose their jobs, but maybe what Silicon Valley really needs is another DotCom-type crash.

    I mean, what positive things have Silicon Valley as a whole really accomplished over the past 10 years?

    Well, they've managed to make advertising and the collection of personal data far more invasive and pervasive than it was before.

    They've given us "social media", which is really just another way of delivering targeted, inane advertising, and harvesting personal info.

    Anything new showing some potential, like virtual reality, is quickly being hijacked as yet another method to, you guessed it, deliver advertisements and collect personal data!

    The programming languages they've created, like Go and especially Rust, are nothing impressive. We're still using C and/or C++ for any and all real work, and will be for some time.

    Databases have taken a big step backward with all of the NoSQL hype they generated in Silicon Valley.

    Web browsers today are worse than they were a decade ago. Just look at how badly Firefox has regressed. Its UI went from being really usable to being awkward to use thanks to Australis, lots of good functionality was removed, lots of dumb functionality was added in, and its performance still causes problems for lots of people. Chrome isn't impressive either.

    The price of everything, and especially of housing and rent, has been distorted beyond belief in San Francisco and the surrounding areas, causing untold headaches for long-time residents.

    Silicon Valley has a lot of potential, but so much of it has been wasted these past 10 to 15 years. Maybe another economic reset is just what that region, and the technology industry in general, needs.

  5. Re:Damn cloud by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 5, Interesting

    So you can buy a cheaper PC and get more overall processing done.

    Unless you need that processing done locally for one reason or another, or else the prices being charged by "the cloud" were exorbitant or required subscriptions that essentially cause you to pay for unused cycles.

    I'm not yet convinced this is actually the reasoning behind this trend. I suspect PCs are "fast enough" for the majority of the market, and the minority that requires faster PCs is going to end up paying more or possibly be starved.

  6. Re:Layoffs in the Valley... by 110010001000 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    He said "growth days" and is 100% correct. Investors want exponential revenue growth even if the company loses money and will be dead in 10 years. Investors are stupid.

  7. Intel lays off 12000. Hires 2000 H1Bs per year by guruevi · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Not only that, but they are lobbying for more H1B's while hiring ~2000/year

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  8. Re:Who to blame? by JoeyRox · · Score: 4, Interesting

    You're speaking as if the foundries provide Intel a unique competitive market position. In terms of the x86 market they certainly do (at least they used to) - the mobile market is another story. Those vertically-integrated foundries can be a capital nightmare. The arrangement works well when growth is strong but become a multi-billion dollar albatross when it doesn't. This is why nearly every company has become fabless; the contract fab model works better for all market participants, for the fabless companies because they avoid the capital investment and the fabs who get better utilization of their resources when the semiconductor product mix changes.

    As for the forest, you pointed out in your previous message how many more chips get put into a computer vs a mobile device. That's fine except for the fact that PC shipments for 2016 will probably be around 270 million, compared to a projected 1.5 billion smartphones. Add to that tablets, internet of things, microwaves, automobiles, etc.. etc.. etc..

  9. Re:Damn cloud by Neo-Rio-101 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    "I think there is a world market for maybe five computers." Thomas Watson, president of IBM 1943

    Amazon, Azure, iCloud, and a few others

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