Intel Labs has pledged to invest $100 million (£62 million) directly into US university research over the next five years, as the chip giant seeks to drive innovations in computing and communications.
The company will open Intel Science and Technology Centres across multiple universities throughout the year, with a focus on projects in select technology areas that align with the company’s research agenda including visual computing, mobility, security and embedded solutions.
The company said the new model is expected to result in US researchers receiving up to five times more funding from Intel Labs when compared to the previous approach.
As an initial step, Intel Labs also announced that Stanford University would be the hub for the first centre, which will focus on improving visual computing experiences for consumers and professionals.
Researchers at Stanford will collaborate with a community of researchers from seven other universities, a company release said. The recently introduced second generation Intel Core processor with combined visual and 3D graphics will be a key research and development platform for researchers to develop innovations which improve the quality and the way images are captured or created, manipulated or interpreted and ultimately displayed to the viewer.
This first Intel Science and Technology Centre, as well as those that will follow later this year, represents a new model of collaboration for the company. Until now, Intel Labs ran open collaboration centres near research universities and a substantial portion of the company’s funding focused on operating, maintaining and staffing these facilities.
The new centres will be Intel-funded and jointly led by Intel and university researchers. They are designed to provide more dollars in the hands of researchers, and to encourage tighter collaboration between academic thought leaders in essential technology areas such as visual computing, security and mobile computing.
For maximum flexibility, Intel will be able to tune its research agenda across the research centers over time. Intel said it plans to invite proposals from the academic community to continue pursuing the creation of additional science and technology centers.
“Intel Labs has long been a significant investor in university research and this program is the next step in that critical investment,” said Justin Rattner, Intel’s chief technology officer. “The pace of technology change is getting faster. With today’s announcement we are ensuring that Intel Labs’ academic research support is adaptable and flexible. Our new approach should allow us to quickly and dynamically invest in the most promising academic work.”
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