Despite all sorts of disobedience, Intel is about to celebrate its 50th birthday, which is undoubtedly a historic moment, and Intel is commemorating in various ways.
As part of the celebration, Intel recently dug up the Time Capsule that was buried in 2003 when the company celebrated its 35th anniversary under the auspices of interim CEO Bob Swan.
Look at it all together:
Nothing is particularly valuable, more commemorative value, among them On the left is the chopsticks and bracelets of Intel Malaysia employees. Above the middle is the CEO Barrett's badge and ultra-wideband receiver antenna.
Of course the most is the processor, including Willamette, Northwood, Northwood Mobile architecture Pentium 4, Prestonia architecture Xeon, They have all become history, and even the Costa Rica packaging factories that have produced them are closed.
At the same time, Intel has also planted a new time capsule that will be opened on Intel's 75th anniversary, which is 2043.
The things buried this time include Intel's 2017 annual report, the Intel Shooting Star drone (which once flew at the PyeongChang Winter Olympics), the arrogant SSD solid state drive, and various souvenirs from the Intel global community.