heatsink
Mechanical Engineer
We are looking for a Mechanical Engineer to be a part of the Mechanical and Thermal Engineering Group (MTEG), which is the design center of excellence for all mechanical (sockets, chip debug hardware, chassis, lab robotics, automation equipment etc..) and thermal (passive heatsinks, active heatsinks, thermal margining tools, thermal controllers, system thermal solutions) for all Validation of nearly every Intel's silicon product (Products that power: laptops, notebooks, tablets, phones, work stations, servers, super computers, wearables, drones etc..). The candidate will be exposed to a variety of design and analysis opportunities in both Thermal and Mechanical engineering across multiple business segments. Intel AI, leveraging Intel's world leading position in silicon innovation and proven history in creating the compute standards that power our world, is transforming Artificial Intelligence (AI) with the Intel AI products portfolio. Harnessing silicon designed specifically for AI, end to end solutions that broadly span from the data center to the edge, and tools that enable customers to quickly deploy and scale up, Intel AI is inside AI and leading the next evolution of compute. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, religious creed, sex, national origin, ancestry, age, physical or mental disability, medical condition, genetic information, military and veteran status, marital status, pregnancy, gender, gender expression, gender identity, sexual orientation, or any other characteristic protected by local law, regulation, or ordinanceโฆ.
How To Build a PC
Back in the days of dial-up internet, it was commonplace to build your own computer. Instead of walking into a Best Buy or logging onto Dell's website to shop for a complete unit, you'd assemble a desktop PC yourself using standardized, commodity parts purchased either online or at a store specializing in computer components. These days, most consumers have only ever bought pre-fab systems, no assembly required. However, many gamers and computer hobbyists still prefer to roll their own boxes. Doing so means you maintain total control over how the computer turns out, and a successful DIY build is a point of pride. Also, knowing your way around the inside of a PC makes it easier to replace a single piece of a broken-down system instead of just junking your whole rig and buying a new one.
Rare Apple-1 sells for 815K
A rare "Celebration" Apple-1 computer built by Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs in 1976 sold for 815,000 this week, according to MacRumors, after a bid for 1.2 million was pulled at the last minute. This particular board was not part of a known production run, and was never sold to the public. The Apple-1 is the very first Apple computer, the first personal computer marketed to consumers, and the first Apple product in history. To build it, Steve Jobs sold his only means of getting around, a Volkswagen Microbus, and Steve Wozniak sold his HP-65 calculator. The auction, held on CharityBuzz, was for the computer and a variety of accessories.