Day 21 of 25: Applications of the iCORE™ Framework
Operate
Personal computers were becoming more common, but the experience behind them wasn’t consistent. Different manufacturers used different approaches to the core processor, which created variation across performance, reliability, and even how applications behaved. That inconsistency made the ecosystem harder to build on, especially for developers and manufacturers trying to scale.
Intel made a strategic decision to focus on the processor as the critical foundation. Rather than trying to control every layer of the computer, the emphasis was placed on making one core component faster, more reliable, and consistent enough that others could confidently build around it.
That approach eventually became visible through “Intel Inside.” More than a marketing message, it signaled a shift in role. Intel positioned itself as the dependable layer beneath the system, the part that gave everything else stability.
As adoption grew, manufacturers standardized around Intel processors, which brought more predictability to software development and improved consistency for users. The ecosystem became easier to navigate because one key dependency was no longer a variable.
There’s a broader idea here about how influence is built. You don’t always need to own the entire system to shape it. Strengthening the part everything depends on can naturally place you at the center of how that system evolves.
