hist78
Well-known member
I have ONE question for Craig Barret, if you are so smart when you were CEO why did you allow Intel to go down the path that lead the company to where they are today?
"Craig Barrett served as CEO of Intel from 1998 to 2005 and as Chairman from 2005 to 2009. He was not only the captain steering the entire Intel ship, but also the steward of its long term prosperity. "
"From my analysis, Intel spent $50.32 billion on share buybacks between 2000 and 2009, when Mr. Barrett was either CEO or Chairman. I can’t help but wonder: what if he had spent only half that amount, keeping $25 billion to improve Intel’s long term competitiveness, or even to start Intel Foundry at a time when TSMC was still not as strong as Intel?"
Former Intel CEO Craig Barrett on saving Intel
A couple of teasers from the article: "6. The current Intel CEO's comments about not investing in new technology (14A) until customers sign up is a joke." "9. The FFWBMs (four former wise board members) of Intel continue to claim you have to break Intel into two pieces before any customer...
semiwiki.com
When Robert Noyce, Gordon Moore, and Andy Grove retired from Intel one by one, Craig Barrett became the person responsible for guiding the company into the 21st century and beyond. Unfortunately, he made several mistakes and questionable decisions that have had long lasting negative effects.
One example was his choice of Paul Otellini as successor, the first Intel CEO without an engineering background. Otellini is best known for rejecting Apple’s request for Intel to manufacture SoCs for the upcoming iPhone, believing the order would be too small and unprofitable. The first iPhone launched in June 2007, when Otellini was CEO and Barrett was Chairman of Intel.
Fast forward to 2024: Apple paid about $23 billion to TSMC for manufacturing services, while Intel’s total revenue for the same year was $53.1 billion. It's a stark and sobering contrast.
Last edited: