smartpatrol
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- Mar 8, 2006
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Looks impressive, but I think its going to have to same problem as nVidia's Tegra; ie. Who is Intel going to partner with?
Samsung is going to use their own Exynos SoCs.
HTC is pretty firmly in Qualcomm's camp.
Motorola has been pretty much TI exclusive.
Even Apple has invested heavily into designing their own SoCs.
And those are all of the major players in the smartphone game right now.
From an Ars article by Jon Stokes a year ago:
[Intel will]make its own mobiles, desktops, TVs, and other CE devices, and give away all that work as a set of "reference designs" to phone and consumer electronics makers like HTC and Samsung. These OEMs would take Intel's products, wrap them in some industrial design, and target them at different price points. This is by far the most likely direction that Intel is going to move in, because it already is doing this with different kinds of mobile and consumer electronics products (Smart TV being an example of the latter).
Under this second scenario, Intel becomes basically a mobile device and consumer electronics company that's attached to a giant set of fabs. OEMs would buy fully made, market-ready products from Intel and then tailor them with varying degrees of engineering and design in order to get some differentiation; the OEMs would then sell these products to consumers, who wouldn't really know or care whether there was an Intel or an ARM chip inside them.
http://arstechnica.com/business/news/2011/02/nvidia-30-and-the-riscification-of-x86.ars
That could be pretty enticing for smaller players looking to get into the smartphone market. Also, didn't Motorola already announce they would use Intel SOCs in future smartphones?