Intel to focus on how computers will be used in the future

Chip maker creates new research lab to study how people want to experience technology

Intel Corp. is creating a new research lab dedicated to helping scientists figure out how people will use computers in the future .

Intel's Chief Technology Officer Justin Rattner announced the formation of the new lab, dubbed Interaction and Experience Research, at the company's annual Research Day in Mountain View, Calif. Rattner said the new lab is focused on envisioning new user experiences and new computing platforms.

" Better technology isn't enough these days," said Rattner. "What the individual values today is a deeply personal, information experience."

Intel Fellow Genevieve Bell will lead the new research division.

"Intel now touches more things in people's lives than just the PC," Bell said. "Intel chips and the Internet are now in televisions, set-tops, handhelds, automobiles, signage and more. [The new division] will build on 15 years of research into the ways in which people use, re-use and resist new information and communication technologies. Social science, design and human-computer interaction researchers will continue that mission, asking questions about what people will value, what will fit into their lives and what they love about the things they already have."

Bell said Intel is looking to marry these human insights with the company's computer research to create the next generation of technology.

Manny Vara, a technology strategist with Intel, said in an interview with Computerworld that the technology company is putting a strong new emphasis on studying people and how they use technology now and how they want to be able to use it in the future.

"In 10 to 20 years from now, I think in a lot of cases we probably won't even think of it as computing anymore if we do it right," said Vara. "It'll just become part of what you're doing."

He noted, for instance, that social networking is a phrase that gets a lot of attention. In a few years, digitally connecting with people socially and for business will become a routine.

"Applications will have social features added to them," said Vara. "I think that any piece of software will have social aspects built in. We're going to make a lot of these consumer tools more useful, and you'll see more and more of them on the business side."

More about: Intel, mobiles, Mountain View
References show all

Comments

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
Users posting comments agree to the TechWorld comments policy.
Login or register to link comments to your user profile, or you may also post a comment without being logged in.
Related Coverage
Related Whitepapers
Latest Stories
Community Comments
Tags: Web 2.0 and Web Apps, software, Intel, hardware systems, Enterprise Web 2.0/Collaboration, Emerging Technologies, collaboration, applications
Whitepapers
All whitepapers
 
rhs_login_lockGet exclusive access to Techworld news, reports & analysis.

Twitter Feed