The question is what they're leaving out of the story. Maybe this is a full accounting and law enforcement needs to chill the fuck out. Maybe it's not the whole story and law enforcement are doing their job correctly. Maybe it's still an overreaction, but more justifiable. In any case, there is no reason to take Reason at their word.
frezik
Plus, if you can get the right model, you can play PS2 and PS1 games on it. That's a ridiculous library full of hidden gems.
There's plenty of companies with stock options as part of the compensation package. They're always just a bone thrown in. They absolutely do not want employees to be able to effectively do a hostile takeover of their own company and set it up as some kind of commie worker cooperative.
Not quite that, but more that the entire thing brings into question Intel's competence.
I like a bigger screen. Gave the 13 to my wife.
It's not just performance, though. It's also trust. If performance per watt was all that mattered, AMD would have cornered the server market years ago. Intel held on because they were considered rock solid stable--very important in a server. That trust was completely broken by the recent instability issues.
Their entire architecture also seems to be just plain behind now. The Ultra 2xx series of processors is not only on TSMC, but on a better node than AMD is using for Ryzen 9000 series. But you wouldn't know it from the benchmarks of either performance or efficiency.
Sony is also really good at this. With the PS2 against the Dreamcast, they walked on stage, said "$299", and walked off. Later, the PS3 was struggling against the XB360, but then the Red Ring of Death issues popped up and they pulled way ahead. Microsoft then tries a bunch of Kintect crap with the next generation, and Sony says "do you want to play games? Buy a PS4. It will play games" and they win that generation outright.
Tons of other problems with Sony, but they are masters of taking advantage of competitors' mistakes.
Their market cap crossed paths well before that the 14th gen issues. Intel seems to be rushing things specifically because they're trying to catch up to AMD, and is sacrificing too much to get there.
Note that Linus' disagreement was largely over design decisions and microkernel stuff. Linus actually respects Tanenbaum a great deal. Tanenbaum's book on operating systems is a CS classic and is a direct influence on the young Linus.
Scotland has really good wind power, anyway. Between that, nuclear, and a few other renewable sources, you guys are down to 10% fossil fuel energy use. So don't worry about solar.