Intel has been on a tear lately in multiple markets. It's continued to unveil new IoT and AI products for low-power markets, like the Nervana microprocessor, and it wants a major piece of the 5G space. It's building its own GPU architecture and while it canceled Knights Hill, its HPC-focused many-integrated-core (MIC) processor, it intends to return to this space with a new architecture. It's announced shipments of Xeons with integrated FPGAs, a feature four years in the making. Former CEO Brian Krzanich made it clear that he intended to focus on building Intel's market share in multiple emerg