Intel Capital seeks out and invests in technology companies worldwide. Intel Capital focuses on both established and new technologies that aim to help to develop industry standard solutions, drive global Internet growth, facilitate new usage models, and advance the computing and communications platforms.
Since 1991, Intel Capital has invested more than US$7.5 billion in approximately 1,000 companies in 45 countries. In that time frame, 168 portfolio companies have gone public on various exchanges around the world and 212 were acquired or participated in a merger. In 2007, Intel Capital invested about US$639 million in 166 deals wi...
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Intel Capital seeks out and invests in technology companies worldwide. Intel Capital focuses on both established and new technologies that aim to help to develop industry standard solutions, drive global Internet growth, facilitate new usage models, and advance the computing and communications platforms.
Since 1991, Intel Capital has invested more than US$7.5 billion in approximately 1,000 companies in 45 countries. In that time frame, 168 portfolio companies have gone public on various exchanges around the world and 212 were acquired or participated in a merger. In 2007, Intel Capital invested about US$639 million in 166 deals with approximately 37 percent of funds invested outside the United States.
Intel Capital has made a number of well known investments around the globe. These include Actions Semiconductor, Bellrock Media, Broadcom, CNET, CitrixSystems, Clearwire, Elpida Memory, FPT, India Infoline.com, Inktomi, Insyde Software, Integrant Technologies, Marvell, MySQL, NIIT, PCCW, Red Hat, Rediff.com, Research in Motion, Sasken, SiRF, Smart Technologies, Sohu.com, Techfaith, VA Linux, and WebMD.
Intel Capital Other
Intel Capital CEO Summit
Attendance to this particular CEO Summit is based on nomination and is limited to Intel Captials's invested portfolio companies, Intel corporate customers, and some of the best minds in academia, government, and technology. The CEO Summit aims to offer a way to interact with highly differentiated technology companies in the Intel Capital portfolio.
Intel Capital History
Before Santa Clara Valley became known as Silicon Valley, Robert Noyce and Gordon Moore started Intel with the help of venture capitalist Arthur Rock who contributed $10,000 and raised an additional $2.5 million. By then, Moore had already authored what is now well-known as Moore's Law, and it has been the watchword behind Intel's success over the past four decades. Intel's rich history has powered the rise of the Information Age, combining innovation with business savvy to quite literally change the world.
In the early 1990s, Intel began with a strategy to seed just a few companies whose products and services filled gaps in its own product line, capabilities, and capacity. But that strategy soon grew.
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