Prior to 1998, the United Kingdom was workingin partnership with the United States on a host of major military development projects, including many that involved the use of net-centric warfare.
But whilst working on large-scale energy projectsin developing countries, she also realized that the pressing needs of many poor individuals were still not being served.
Tanausu Ramirez, another Intel research scientist working on the 48-core chip said that instead of one core working at near top capacity and using a lot of energy, many cores could run in parallel on different projects and use less energy.