IntelGearFor a More Inclusive Fourth of July, Send in the DronesBy Brian BarrettGearIt's Time to Get Excited About the Future of PCs. (Yes, PCs)By Brian BarrettBusinessThe US Gets Tough With Putin's Inner CircleBy Brian BarrettIntel's VR-ready Mini PC Lets You Ditch the Bulky DesktopBy Brendan NystedtGearFor Apple, Quitting Intel Won't Come EasyBy Brian BarrettSecurityMeltdown, Spectre, and the Costs of Unchecked InnovationBy Vijith AssarBusinessMonday briefing: Intel is being sued over Meltdown and SpectreBy WIRED InsiderBusinessWhy JP Morgan and Daimler Are Testing Quantum ComputersBy Tom SimoniteSecurityMeltdown and Spectre Patching Has Been a Total Train WreckBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityThe Hidden Toll of Fixing Meltdown and SpectreBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityHow So Many Researchers Found a 20-Year-Old Chip FlawBy Andy GreenbergSecurityMeltdown and Spectre Fixes Arrive—But Don't Solve EverythingBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityA Critical Intel Flaw Breaks Basic Security for Most PCsBy Andy GreenbergSecurityIntel Chip Flaws Leave Millions of Devices ExposedBy Lily Hay NewmanBusinessTuesday briefing: Intel's new laptop CPU will have custom AMD graphicsBy WIRED InsiderBusinessIntel’s New Chip Design Takes Pointers From Your BrainBy Tom SimoniteTransportationThis Week in the Future of Cars: Time to Problem-SolveBy Alex DaviesTransportationWaymo and Intel Shack Up to Create a Robo-Car Power CoupleBy Aarian MarshallCultureShakespeare’s sprite takes flight as an Intel-crafted digital avatarGearIntel’s New Processors Are Built For the High-Powered Future of PCsBy Brian BarrettGearIntel's Plan to Thunderbolt 3 All of the ThingsBy Brian BarrettSecurityThe 'Chilling Effect' of Trump's Loose Talk With RussiaBy Brian BarrettSecurityHack Brief: Intel Fixes a Critical Bug That Lingered for 7 Dang YearsBy Lily Hay NewmanBusinessIntel cans its developer forum after 20 years citing it 'no longer meets a business need'By Matt BurgessMore Stories