A conversation with Paul Otellini, President and CEO of Intel Corporation hosted by the USF Center for the Pacific Rim.
Intel established its first assembly and testing facility in China in Shanghai in 1996. Three factories there now employ 3,500 employees. It has nurtured a great number of knowledge workers in world-class chip assembly and test technology. India is Intel's largest non-manufacturing site outside the U.S. Its mission is to "accelerate the adoption of computing and communication technologies" and operate a global high-tech center in Bangalore. In 2006 Intel announced that it will invest USD $1 billion in the largest single factory within the Intel network at the Saigon High Tech Park, the first investment of its kind by the semiconductor industry in Vietnam- University of San Francisco
Bio
Patrick Lloyd Hatcher
Patrick Lloyd Hatcher is a professor at the University of San Francisco Center for the Pacific Rim and formerly a Kiriyama Fellow, Center for the Pacific Rim for Spring 2001.
A military historian by profession, Hatcher taught in both the history and political science departments at the University of California at Berkeley prior to his retirement. One of Cal's most sought after guest speakers, he was honored with the MacArthur Award from the Institute of International Studies at Cal in 1987 and was the recipient of the UC Berkeley Instructor of the Year Award in 1988.
Patrick Hatcher received his Ph.D. in history from the University of California at Berkeley. Prior to embarking on an academic career, he had risen to the rank of Lieutenant Colonel in the U.S. Army. From 1996 to 1999 Hatcher served as a judge for the Kiriyama Pacific Rim Book Prize and in 1999 he chaired the panel of nonfiction judges. He has taught at other Bay Area institutions, including St. Mary’s College, UC Davis, and Golden Gate University.
Paul Otellini
Paul S. Otellini is president and chief executive officer of Intel Corporation. He became the company's fifth CEO on May 18, 2005, succeeding Craig R. Barrett. Otellini previously had served as Intel's president and chief operating officer, positions he held since 2002, the same year he was elected to Intel's board of directors. Otellini joined Intel in 1974. Otellini received a bachelor's degree in economics from the University of San Francisco in 1972, and an MBA from the University of California, Berkeley in 1974.