- Nov 14, 2011
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Let's face it- Kaveri alone is not going to fulfil AMD's WSA obligations. It's looking like a nice chip, but it's just not going to have enough volume to hit that target. AMD's only other products coming out of GloFo are the 32nm Piledriver FX and Opterons, and those are rapidly dying off with no replacement in sight. So it looks like AMD are going to have to eat another massive WSA payment.
Why are they letting this happen? Global Foundries has the standard menu of ARM IP available to fab on their process. Why don't AMD do what Rockchip do, and just take a load of completely standard ARM IP (Cortex-A12s, Mali GPUs) with no custom elements at all, put together a low-end 28nm tablet SoC as cheaply as they possibly can, and sell it as cheaply as possible? Even if AMD makes zero net profit on a product line like this, it still burns through a big chunk of the WSA obligations and saves it a hefty penalty payment. Hell, AMD could sell the chips at a loss and still have it work out cheaper than WSA payments- there's definitely scope for undercutting the competition.
Seems like a straightforward plan. So why is it not happening?
Why are they letting this happen? Global Foundries has the standard menu of ARM IP available to fab on their process. Why don't AMD do what Rockchip do, and just take a load of completely standard ARM IP (Cortex-A12s, Mali GPUs) with no custom elements at all, put together a low-end 28nm tablet SoC as cheaply as they possibly can, and sell it as cheaply as possible? Even if AMD makes zero net profit on a product line like this, it still burns through a big chunk of the WSA obligations and saves it a hefty penalty payment. Hell, AMD could sell the chips at a loss and still have it work out cheaper than WSA payments- there's definitely scope for undercutting the competition.
Seems like a straightforward plan. So why is it not happening?
