assuming i have this right, the patent for x86 is over (or near enough) but is useless as other aspects of modern cpus (sse, x86-64 etc) are still patented or whatever.
could intel get an arm licence, throw everything they have at getting the best phone/tablet soc out there (non x86) and with their huge process tech advantage, totally outclass every other player? then, add extensions or whatever the correct term is to essentially lock out other players from the market? meaning everyone else could use arm, but not the custom designed parts intel would make?
if intel was willing to use arm, couldn't they totally dominate the phone/tablet market? i mean even if say in 2 years time they came out with a soc that was just equal to whatever qualcomm has at the time, their node advantage should mean that their socs would use far less power than the other players using TSMC/GF or whoever right? thereby having better battery life?
might even be enough to have apple running to intel to make socs for the iphone 6 or whatever.
or, is intel so adamant about sticking with x86 that it overrules every other consideration?
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forgot to say, i wrote this in one go as it poured from my brain - and my brain is a messed up place - so sorry if it's a weird read
could intel get an arm licence, throw everything they have at getting the best phone/tablet soc out there (non x86) and with their huge process tech advantage, totally outclass every other player? then, add extensions or whatever the correct term is to essentially lock out other players from the market? meaning everyone else could use arm, but not the custom designed parts intel would make?
if intel was willing to use arm, couldn't they totally dominate the phone/tablet market? i mean even if say in 2 years time they came out with a soc that was just equal to whatever qualcomm has at the time, their node advantage should mean that their socs would use far less power than the other players using TSMC/GF or whoever right? thereby having better battery life?
might even be enough to have apple running to intel to make socs for the iphone 6 or whatever.
or, is intel so adamant about sticking with x86 that it overrules every other consideration?
--
forgot to say, i wrote this in one go as it poured from my brain - and my brain is a messed up place - so sorry if it's a weird read
