Apple showed a slide yesterday of the iPad outselling all other PC companies.How much of it is at the expense of other sectors like more traditional desktop/laptop market?
Note that Apple was comparing against each PC manufacturer individually, not all combined (like you're wording it). There are still more desktops/laptops being sold than tablets.Apple showed a slide yesterday of the iPad outselling all other PC companies.
Note that Apple was comparing against each PC manufacturer individually, not all combined (like you're wording it). There are still more desktops/laptops being sold than tablets.
Also keep in mind that everyone already has a PC, and will only buy a new one if the current one is either broken or too slow. So it takes years between purchases. Tablets on the other hand are a relative novelty and I bet that the vast majority of sales are people buying their very first tablet.
It's also a massive hype. People buy one just for bragging rights or because their neighbor already has one. But it's a waste of money for those who thought it could replace their desktop or laptop.
Once the dust settles I don't think tablet sales will be as phenomenal. It's just one form factor among an entire range. Of course it benefits ARM right now, but keep in mind that manufacturers are seeking to eventually bring desktop applications to tablets and this requires desktop performance. ARM has trouble delivering that, while Intel is only a process shrink away from conquering the mobile market. Plus is has a huge lead in desktop application compatibility.
So ARM's growth might be short-lived. They don't have the R&D power that Intel has, nor do they innovate on process technology. Intel has a huge margin on every chip it sells, while ARM only gets a minor fraction. That's not going to change any time soon. If ARM tablet sales threaten Intel's markets, they'll strike back real hard.
So ARM's growth might be short-lived. They don't have the R&D power that Intel has, nor do they innovate on process technology. Intel has a huge margin on every chip it sells, while ARM only gets a minor fraction. That's not going to change any time soon. If ARM tablet sales threaten Intel's markets, they'll strike back real hard.
ARM develops the ISA and the vanilla core for the generation, it stops here. Process is developed elsewhere and any customization beyond the vanilla cores falls to others.
Intel R&D goes to designing, tweaking and developing the manufacturing process, the entire deal.
If you want to know how much R&D is being spent on ARM you must add TSMC, Samsung, Apple, Nvidia, TI, and Qualcomm.
The ARM guys' R&D isn't additive among competitors in the space.
Sure, but each is investing that R&D to compete with each other, not with Intel. None of these can decide on their own to go head-to-head with Intel in the desktop market. Likewise, once Intel has it's mind set on the lucrative mobile market, who's going to stop them?If you want to know how much R&D is being spent on ARM you must add TSMC, Samsung, Apple, Nvidia, TI, and Qualcomm.
So ARM (the architecture) isn't going to displace x86 any time soon.
Give ARM dominance over a decade or 2 and it will still meet the same fate as x86. Bigger ARM manufacturers will devour smaller ones till we are left with 1-2 big players and monopoly happens all over again, just like WD and Seagate.As I've said before, the reason I favor ARM over x86 is because of the fierce competition that x86 has lacked for many years now. They've got more incentive to produce larger gains and provide more than an AMD or Intel has in the traditional PC space. Ultimately, that competition also means you wind up with some very good products (see A6 and Snapdragon S4 SoCs)
In what universe? They're already sacrificing CPU performance and GPU performance for their HSA delusion. You think sharing the die space with ARM cores as well is going to offer any net advantage whatsoever?If AMD's big announcement is that they're willing to integrate ARM cores + x86 onto the same die for more than just security, this could really hurt Intel in the long run.
AMD is on the verge of being irrelevant. People stopped paying attention to what "the only other big x86 chip maker" is doing. If they add ARM cores, that's going to be perceived as something utterly desperate.Not in the performance aspect, but rather in perception -
If the only other big x86 chip maker is willing to deviate from x86 and dive into ARM, do we really want to look toward x86 as a long term platform?
Why? They'll simply sell a smaller chip and still get a larger margin. And besides, the competition for higher performance in the mobile market is very fierce. Intel knows how to make fast chips, they just need one more process shrink to be highly competitive at power consumption and price.Where the performance isn't needed, that's going to suddenly be a tougher sell for Intel.
Intel is its own competition. They have to stay innovative to have developers create more powerful software and get people to upgrade at a regular pace. Looking at the revolutionary features of AVX2 and TSX, I think they've got their future secured.As I've said before, the reason I favor ARM over x86 is because of the fierce competition that x86 has lacked for many years now. They've got more incentive to produce larger gains and provide more than an AMD or Intel has in the traditional PC space. Ultimately, that competition also means you wind up with some very good products (see A6 and Snapdragon S4 SoCs)
Give ARM dominance over a decade or 2 and it will still meet the same fate as x86. Bigger ARM manufacturers will devour smaller ones till we are left with 1-2 big players and monopoly happens all over again, just like WD and Seagate.
There will always be a need for more performance for users who actually use their computers/devices to do work. Till ARM actually becomes practical enough to provide similar performance to x86, Intel will still exist.
That's a premature thing to say. ARM hasn't conquered the new mobile market from x86, they just rolled into it. The big clash still has to happen, and ARM's recent success at invading an empty market is no indication of how that battle will be concluded.It's already replaced it. You're still looking at server and PC. In the very lucrative mobile market, ARM isn't the little fish but the big one.
Again that's really irrelevant in the bigger picture. Intel is suffering a tiny bit from the economic crisis, while ARM is still growing strong thank's to little competition (for now). It in no way means ARM is actually winning over Intel.So in a time where AMD and Intel are cutting margins by close to double digits (or double digits in AMD's case) and dropping their quarterly estimates, the ARM space -- ARM and its licensees -- are seeing increasing revenue.
That's a premature thing to say. ARM hasn't conquered the new mobile market from x86, they just rolled into it. The big clash still has to happen, and ARM's recent success at invading an empty market is no indication of how that battle will be concluded.
Again that's really irrelevant in the bigger picture. Intel is suffering a tiny bit from the economic crisis, while ARM is still growing strong thank's to little competition (for now). It in no way means ARM is actually winning over Intel.
Custom SoCs are overrated. Remember when processors were a bunch of individual chips on a PCB? This allowed for customization, but then Intel offered a single integrated chip which could perform all those tasks combined.With ARM, they're allowing third parties the ability to tweak and play with the architecture as they see fit and others the full design + GPU if they need an entire product and sell it as their own SoC.
Can you buy an Intel x86 designed core and fab it yourself? Make any changes to the architecture at all?
I agree 100% with everything you've written here.
Intel still dominates in the x86 space, server and PC. They're making a pretty penny here, but even still they're not meeting their quarterly estimates and as a result the stock has been steadily dipping over the past three quarters. Whatever stranglehold Intel has here isn't enough to please neither the investors nor Intel. Clearly they need to make headway into newer markets.
Consolidation will happen on ARM just as it hsa on x86, but there's a significant difference here:
It's not limited to whoever entered it first. What I mean is, if me or you wanted to get a startup going that would use the x86 ISA and its derivatives, it would be quite literally impossible. Nobody is allowed to enter; no ifs ands or buts.
Oh goody. A whole year.Intel's only going to dive in feet first at the end of Q4 2013 or early Q1 2014, though. So they still have a whole year of having it all to themselves.
Nonsense. Tablets don't replace a desktop or laptop. Intel's margins are affected by other factors. ARM hasn't stolen any market share from Intel yet, but Intel is about to steal market share from ARM.The issue Intel is facing is that the PC's role is diminishing...
Which is why Intel is diversifying into making lower powered processors that would meet the requirements that smartphones and tablet require. Intel isn't idling while their piece of the pie is taken away.Intel still dominates in the x86 space, server and PC. They're making a pretty penny here, but even still they're not meeting their quarterly estimates and as a result the stock has been steadily dipping over the past three quarters. Whatever stranglehold Intel has here isn't enough to please neither the investors nor Intel. Clearly they need to make headway into newer markets.
By that virtue, AMD would be doing quite well since they do make x86 processors too but that isn't the case since it is far more complex for a small company to undertake. Intel wants to make the most of their customers, it is obvious that they wouldn't want competition against their product.Consolidation will happen on ARM just as it hsa on x86, but there's a significant difference here:
It's not limited to whoever entered it first. What I mean is, if me or you wanted to get a startup going that would use the x86 ISA and its derivatives, it would be quite literally impossible. Nobody is allowed to enter; no ifs ands or buts.
With ARM, they're allowing third parties the ability to tweak and play with the architecture as they see fit and others the full design + GPU if they need an entire product and sell it as their own SoC.
Can you buy an Intel x86 designed core and fab it yourself? Make any changes to the architecture at all?
The difference is that the x86 approach limits the competition that's allowed to enter the space. Imo as a consumer, it's ridiculous. Ultimately I'm the one who's shafted.
So while AMD and Intel were charging $1000 for CPUs, had there been another 3-4 competitors it would've been significantly cheaper.
In the end, all I want is a cheaper and better product. That's spurred on by competition and that happens to be something that the x86 space has been lacking for years now. We're looking at 15% performance bumps and being wowed... really?
