There is no room for anyone but 1 in the endgame. The IC design might actually be the most expensive and not the fab.
I tend to agree, a lot with that.
Many, many years ago, we sort of already had it happen in the computer industry with operating systems.
Ok, there are alternatives to Microsoft Windows, such as Apples (mac)OS-X, Linux, Googles android (sort of, as more geared towards hand held devices), etc etc.
But, to many home consumers, a desktop Windows(R) is what a home PC or business PC is all about.
But, I'm not convinced that 'Microsoft's' (what I think is) a MONOPOLY, is a good thing for consumers and/or businesses, that need/want to use Microsofts products.
Not sure why you compare it with software. Software uses an entirely different business model and got no entry barrier.
@blackened23
Intel better ensure to buy a huge warehouse to carefully stockpile all those amazing chips.
Why? They'll be in tablets delighting both Android and Windows fans this holiday season. I know that Bay Trail is the tablet platform I've been waiting for...7" Windows 8 tablet with performance that blows the doors off of what's out there currently?
Yes, please
Like all those amazing Tegra 4 chips.
T4 is on par with the top tier from Qualcomm and Samsung yet it didn't score any major design win. Having a good chip doesn't guarantee you a thing. Chip makers could play the same game as Intel back when it bribed all the major OEMs... wait, all the major OEMs are also chip makers now.
They're all allied to leave Intel out. The HSA foundation is just a visible front.
And Windows 8 is a failure, get it already.
Like all those amazing Tegra 4 chips.
Intel is hell bent on efficiency improvements. They also have more R&D and fab investment/expertise than basically everyone else in the world put together.
It's not a question of 'if' they overtake the competition in every metric, but 'when'. I'm not even a fan of Intel in any way. I couldn't possibly care less whose name is on 'that' company's buildings and products. But facts are facts.
There are multiple reasons that Intel as yet hasn't blown away the phone/tablet world, chiefly their components were too expensive, too power hungry/hot, and too large to be competitive in those spaces. Every single one of those metrics is about to go out the window, and within 24 months we're going to see ramping up to 10nm. What will this mean? This will mean products that absolutely sip power, while enabling more performance from smaller/cooler implementations. Think something in the power range of a 2Ghz i7 in a form factor like an iPhone or Galaxy phone, with battery life that exceeds anything currently on the market. Followed up with 7nm, 5nm and beyond.
The only logical alternative is someone else matching their immense investments in R&D and fabrication efforts. That is extremely unlikely. Intel's expansion in Israel alone is shown to be probably 10 billion+.
Not 'if'.
When.
CPU-World said:Bay Trail-T SoCs for tablets will be released from August 28 to September 13. The slide does not show their processor numbers, but it does list Bay Trail-M SKUs, that will be available "after PRQ".
T4 is on par with the top tier from Qualcomm and Samsung yet it didn't score any major design win. Having a good chip doesn't guarantee you a thing. Chip makers could play the same game as Intel back when it bribed all the major OEMs... wait, all the major OEMs are also chip makers now.
They're all allied to leave Intel out. The HSA foundation is just a visible front.
And Windows 8 is a failure, get it already.
Yeah, what?
Toshiba, HP and Asus announced Tablets with Tegra 4. Toshiba is shipping them in Japan since 2 weeks.
Is Qualcomm an OEM? No? It sells all of its products to device vendors. So your argument is pure malarkey.
T4 lost all of it's design wins because the Snapdragon 600/800 are better by every metric. And the T4 is late, with nvidia scrambling to modify the chip for LTE support - basically nvidia screwed the T4 up in every way fathomable. That's why Qualcomm is getting design wins over the T4. Do you ever wonder why nvidia suddenly decided to license Kepler GPU technology? They need a revenue stream (on top of their dGPU revenue) since the T4 isn't going to sell as they had hoped.
I find it pretty funny that the Bay Trail is going to crush every ARM SOC by every metric, but for some reason, you think they won't sell. Whatever, if you say so. The prior atom didn't sell because it was a terrible chip. Intel went to the drawing board while being hellbent on beating ARM at their game, only this time, they're going to crush ARM at their own efficiency game. "Intel will never beat us in efficiency". Seeing ARMH's hubris catch up to them will be quite funny indeed.
Yeah, what?
Toshiba, HP and Asus announced Tablets with Tegra 4. Toshiba is shipping them in Japan since 2 weeks.
Exophase said:ntel Breaks ARM, Sends Shares Down 20% [View article]
To those who are following the latest blitz of performance numbers of Saltwell vs A15, pushed by Intel, obvious proxy analysts behind paywells, and Ashraf's posts like this one: take heed, because AnTuTu doesn't really tell the full story. And if it wasn't already obvious this study is just running AnTuTu.
First, just to get some context, look at any other CPU bench for Saltwell vs A15 or similar processors - Geekbench, Phoronix, 3DMark physics, even the usual Javascript nonsense is favoring A15 in peak perf across the board. Yet when it comes to AnTuTu we find that it takes twice as many A15 cores to match Saltwell, and this is with a benchmark that scales unreasonably well with core count by simply duplicating run instances. How can this be the case? By virtue of the closed nature of this benchmark it's hard to tell entirely, but you can tell this much from poking around the binary:
a) The x86 target is compiled with ICC
b) The ARM target only supports untweaked NDK GCC - more importantly, just VFP w/16 registers and no NEON path is supported
Normally Intel would have some merit in making a better compiler available, but ICC is not a real option for most Android developers because it's not part of the NDK. It's strange that it's there in the first place - almost certainly a result of Intel paying AnTuTu to use an exotic custom solution, possibly one that Intel helped implement. And there's no good reason for AnTuTu not to support a NEON-capable path (NDK binaries will happily include both)
AnTuTu's CPU tests appear to be based on nbench, an ancient, highly synthetic benchmark that Intel would have had years to crack with special compiler paths. It's not even remotely representative of any real performance characteristics. The difference that Intel's vectorization vs no vectorization can make for these toy functions can be very significant.
If you want to dismiss this and acknowledge the scores anyway go ahead, lots of other popular benchmarks are very bad too. But you should at least not draw sweeping conclusions from a single benchmark, especially when used in marketing pitches.
http://www.anandtech.com/show/7014/asus-new-transformer-pad-infinity-tegra-4-2560-x-1600-ips-displayDid asus announce a T4 tablet? I was under the impression that their zenbook infinity will also be using the Qualcomm SD 800.
Did asus announce a T4 tablet? I was under the impression that their zenbook infinity will also be using the Qualcomm SD 800.
Also, nearly 70% of all Tegra 3 sales were the Google Nexus. Now that Asus/Google swapped to the Snapdragon, that's going to be a huge and painful drop in revenue. If Toshiba and HP are the extent of current T4 design wins, I wish nvidia luck. They'll need it.
The only problem i see is the x86 license, everyone can design/manufacture ARM, only Intel can manufacture ATOM.![]()
