Perhaps but there was this another thread where I posted about Xiaomi, now the point was that the mobile market is a race to bottom & really the only viable competitors left at the end of this rat race will be highly integrated players like Apple, Samsung (because they always have a choice for in house design in flagship products, the ones that actually make any money in this market) & to a lesser extent Qualcomm. What I foresee with contra revenues is a bloodbath in the not so distant future, with pretty much everyone operating on wafer thin margins being wiped out in the blink of an eye.
The point is mobile sector ain't yielding any money for Intel so why'd they not wait this storm out ? It's not like their R&D wasn't yielding any results, but then again they have to chug their fabs along, the only real justification I can see in for this.
Well, SoFIA would be fully integrated, and while it's not on the scene right now, when it hits I can imagine, in my opinion that it'd basically gut all the lower end chips that any company with more than a few dollars to their name would want. SoFIA's aim isn't high performance. It isn't Apple. It's the lower end where they wouldn't make much anyway (but would likely have a sickingly large market share if they play things right which they could work up on.)
But that's just phones (which is part of mobile), as for tabs, I still see Intel being able to compete. Again, it'd need a fully integrated solution (SoFIA on steroids? Or fully integrated BT?), but after that it'd just be a question of price and performance. Intel could likely do performance, but it may need some intervention from another fab to hit the cost window.
They can probably do it, but they'd need to get in before that point (read: now, ie. they have), and then they'd need to make themselves a good solution that can compete with everyone else (they kind of have with BT, but OEM decisions are castrating it.)
