the touch interface in some Dodge vehicles is 1000x worse than sync
As far as Intel's future is concerned, if history is any indication.. Intel is at its best when it's backed into a corner.
As Garak from DS9 said: "And the moral of the story, my dear, is to never underestimate my gift for survival."
When was Intel backed into a corner?
When was Intel backed into a corner?
I am still amazed that not a single car company has taken Android and made a killer built-in car navigation and music system. It seriously can't be that difficult, and the possibilities to differentiate your brand from others with amazing features is immense.
I'd say the P4 days was the most recent example. If they would've continued down the P4 path they would've eventually sunk.
If you don't like the "backed into a corner" metaphor, try "underdog" on for size.
I dont think Intel was backed into a corner nor underdog during those days either. AMD may have made some headway but they were no threat to Intels dominance.
Even the nice after market head units like Pioneer's Appradio 2 are for iOS, the Appradio 2's one of the few that offers Android support. But it's an addition expensive add-on, and absolutely blows compared to the unit's native iPhone support. Android might be stomping iOS in sheer numbers. But looking at after market products for each you would wouldn't be able to tell. I have an iPhone 4 and a Nexus 4, I'd spent a lot on a head unit that worked equally well with both in a heartbeat.
I dont think Intel was backed into a corner nor underdog during those days either. AMD may have made some headway but they were no threat to Intels dominance.
AMD had the better CPUs in those days, and no matter what Intel did with NetBurst, it would have dead ended on a performance plateau while the power use continued to rise. Some one high enough up at Intel saw the writing on the wall and scrapped Netburst before they were backed into a corner.
Now, the anti-competitive, illegal deals Intel made to prevent AMD from building market share and selling product . . . poor AMD only ended up with a one time pay out for that.