Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Intel announces sudden departure of CEO amid financial turmoil

Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger holding a chip.
Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger Walden Kirsch / Intel Corporation

Intel has announced that CEO Pat Gelsinger has retired. The executive, who first joined Intel in 1979 at 18 years old, is being replaced by David Zinsner and Michelle Johnston Holthaus. Holthaus and Zinsner will serve as interim co-CEOs while the board of directors works “diligently and expeditiously” to find a successor.

Gelsinger became CEO in early 2021. At the time, Intel was struggling to regain ground it had lost to AMD in the desktop market, as well as push a more ambitious manufacturing timeline to catch up with foreign chipmakers like TSMC. Under Gelsinger’s leadership, the company made some big strides. Intel’s 12th generation of processors marked a significant turning point in the company’s desktop processors, and an aggressive foundry roadmap has pushed smaller nodes out of U.S.-based plants.

Recommended Videos

Still, Intel is in bad shape financially. Despite the aggressive timeline, the company has outsourced its most recent designs to TSMC with Lunar Lake and Arrow Lake CPUs. And as you can read in our Core Ultra 9 285K review, even those chips struggle to hold up.

This wasn’t just a one-off generation, either. Although Gelsinger’s plans changed the direction of the company, it seems Intel wasn’t able to turn the corner fast enough. In its most recent earnings report, the company reported losses of $16.6 billion. This comes in the face of record revenue from Nvidia and AMD, who have made significant inroads in AI hardware.

As if that weren’t enough, Intel also faces a lawsuit filed by investors in August and a smaller workforce. The company let go of 15,000 employees this year — 15% of its total workforce.

A big part of the company’s turnaround efforts seems to hang on the 2022 U.S. CHIPS Act, which granted close to $30 billion to the company through direct funding and low-interest loans. Less than a week ago, Intel announced $7.86 billion of funding under the act, which is the first round of funding it has seen.

This investment largely targets Intel’s foundry business. The company’s 18A node is in development and with contracts with players like Microsoft and the U.S. Department of Defense. Despite that, Intel had to cancel its 20A node and outsource production to TSMC for Lunar Lake and Arrow Lake. In addition, the Biden administration has reportedly encouraged Intel to consider selling its chip design business to a rival, such as AMD.

The news comes just days before Intel is expected to reveal its next-generation Battlemage GPUs. This is the second generation of Intel’s desktop graphics cards, and they’re expected to target gamers on a budget.

Jacob Roach
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Jacob Roach is the lead reporter for PC hardware at Digital Trends. In addition to covering the latest PC components, from…
CPUs failed PC gamers in 2024
intel core ultra 5 245k review 4

Whenever we have a new generation of processors from AMD and Intel, a lot of things change. Of course, the power balance among the best processors shifts, and there's a seemingly endless number of comparisons to start making between each lineup. This year, however, AMD and Intel barely moved the needle.

That's the despite the fact that both companies debuted entirely new architectures, both of which promised to radically change how our PCs work and perform. Those promises just fell flat, particularly at release. We still saw standout releases like the Ryzen 7 9800X3D, but even with so much hardware flying around, there's been little reason to go out and buy it.

Read more
The best PC gaming feature of 2024 didn’t come from Nvidia, AMD, or Intel
Forza Horizon 5 on the Sony InZone M10S.

One of the great benefits of PC gaming is the ability to take matters in to your own hands. Not enough games support your favorite feature? Unhappy with the frame rate your PC is producing? There's all sorts of applications that can let you tinker and optimize your PC gaming experience.

Many of these are rather niche, but there's one that I would recommend just about every PC gamer install. It's called Lossless Scaling, and if you haven't already heard of it, I'm about to make your day.
How Lossless Scaling scaled up

Read more
I tested Intel’s new XeSS 2 to see if it really holds up against DLSS 3
The Intel logo on the Arc B580 graphics card.

Although it technically arrived alongside the Arc B580, Intel quickly disabled its new XeSS 2 feature shortly after it was introduced. Now, it's back via a new driver update, and with a few fixes to major crashes issues. I took XeSS 2 out for a spin with the Arc B580, which has quickly climbed up the rankings among the best graphics cards, but does XeSS 2 hold up its side of the bargain?

XeSS 2 is Intel's bid to fight back against Nvidia's wildly popular DLSS 3. The upscaling component at the core of XeSS is the same, but XeSS 2 includes both a Reflex-like latency reduction feature and, critically, frame generation. The latency reduction, called XeLL, is enabled by default with frame generation.

Read more