Pathways: Intel promises to hire more women and minorities

It’s not all chips and wearable sensors at Intel’s CES press conference. CEO Brian Krzanich just announced a far-reaching diversity initiative, promising to hire, promote and retain more women and underrepresented minorities. In particular, he said the company intends to invest $300 million in diversity initiatives, with the goal of reaching “full representation” at all levels of the company by 2020. It remains unclear how exactly Intel will determine what the appropriate ratio is, or what number of employees in a specific demographic might indicate success. Intel simply said in a statement that it “full representation” means “representative of the talent available in America.”

The news comes in the wake of bleak disclosures from other tech giants such as Google and Yahoo, most of which have workforces that are predominantly white and male. Indeed, Krzanich says he considers this an initiative not just for Intel, but for peer companies as well. “We’re calling on our industry to again make the seemingly impossible possible by making a commitment to real change and clarity in our goals,” he said in a statement. “Without a workforce that more closely mirrors the population, we are missing opportunities, including not understanding and designing for our own customers.”

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Source: Intel

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Pathways: Intel’s button-sized Curie will enable low-power wearables

Intel is going full throttle into wearables with the release of a button-sized hardware called Curie at CES 2015. The module is composed of several elements, the main one being the company’s minuscule system on a chip called Quark. It also comes equipped with a Bluetooth Low Energy radio, sensors with accelerometer and gyroscope, as well as 384kB flash memory. Intel says Curie hasn’t been authorized by the FCC yet, but if all goes well, it’s scheduled to ship out in the second half of 2015. As you can guess from its components, the module can help make it easier (and faster) for manufacturers to design and produce low-power wearables.

Developing…

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Source: Intel, Curie (PDF)

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