Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Santa Clara semiconductor manufacturer (NASDAQ: INTC) $53.1B FY2024 revenue; $18.8B net loss, Gelsinger resignation Dec 2024, Intel 18A foundry bet, losing CPU/GPU share to AMD and NVIDIA.
Intel Corporation is a Santa Clara, California-based semiconductor company — publicly traded on the NASDAQ (NASDAQ: INTC) as an S&P 500 Information Technology component — designing and manufacturing microprocessors, chipsets, graphics processors, FPGAs, Ethernet controllers, and AI accelerators for personal computers, data center servers, network infrastructure, and embedded applications through approximately 108,000 employees (reduced from 120,000 through 2024 workforce restructuring). Intel faces its most significant competitive and strategic challenge in its 55-year history: in fiscal year 2024, Intel reported revenues of $53.1 billion (-2% year-over-year) with a net loss of approximately $18.8 billion — reflecting $16.6 billion in goodwill and asset impairment charges related to Intel Foundry's strategic reassessment, the most severe annual loss in Intel's history. CEO Pat Gelsinger resigned in December 2024 (effectively forced out by the Intel board after 4 years of leading the IDM 2.0 / Intel Foundry turnaround strategy) — with David Zinsner and Michelle Johnston Holthaus serving as interim co-CEOs while the board searched for a permanent successor. Intel's IDM 2.0 strategy (building Intel Foundry as an external contract semiconductor manufacturer competing with TSMC and Samsung Foundry) consumed $20+ billion in capital expenditure annually to construct the Ohio One and Arizona Fab 52/62 fabs while Intel's own products (Core Ultra processors, Gaudi AI accelerator) lost market share to AMD Ryzen CPUs and NVIDIA's GPU dominance — leaving Intel financially strained from capital deployment while failing to reverse the competitive momentum losses in its product businesses.
Boston industrial CAD/PLM software (NASDAQ: PTC); FY2025 8.5% ARR growth, Kepware/ThingWorx IoT divested to TPG (Nov 2025) under new CEO Neil Barua competing with Siemens Teamcenter for discrete manufacturer PLM.
PTC Inc. is a Boston, Massachusetts-based industrial software company — publicly traded on NASDAQ (NASDAQ: PTC) as an S&P 500 component — providing computer-aided design (CAD), product lifecycle management (PLM), application lifecycle management (ALM), service lifecycle management (SLM), and industrial IoT software to manufacturers across aerospace, defense, automotive, medical devices, and industrial machinery. In FY2025 (fiscal year ended September 30, 2025), PTC reported 8.5% ARR growth and 16% free cash flow growth, with Q4 FY2025 revenue up 39% in constant currency and 18% year-over-year. CEO Neil Barua took over from long-tenured CEO James Heppelmann in February 2024 and introduced the "Barua Blueprint" refocusing PTC on its core CAD/PLM/ALM/SLM strengths. In November 2025, PTC announced the divestiture of its industrial IoT assets — Kepware and ThingWorx — to TPG, sharpening its portfolio around design and lifecycle management software. PTC's product portfolio includes Creo (3D parametric CAD for mechanical engineers), Windchill (PLM for product data and process management), Onshape (cloud-native CAD platform), and Arena (cloud-native PLM/QMS).
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