The Intel Developer Forum showed that the chip-making giant is
overclocking its product development efforts to blitz the
smartphone and consumer electronics market.
Even though PC and server chips account for the bulk of Intel's
revenue, executives at the San Francisco event last week made it
clear that the company believed the future lies in markets where
Intel has very little presence. To change that around, Intel had
one word: Atom.
The low-power processor that ships today in most netbooks is
being down-sized quickly to fit into smartphones and CE devices,
particularly high-definition TVs and set-top boxes. Intel expects
both markets to help keep its revenue-generating engine running in
high gear as growth in the aging PC market grows.
"The PC market in general isn't going to grow as quickly as it
used to," John Spooner, analyst for Technology Business Research,
said. "It's that simple. They need to expand their base to keep
growing."
In 2010, Intel plans to release Moorestown, codename for the
company's second-generation platform for handheld devices. The
platform comprises a system-on-chip that integrates a 45-nanometer
Atom, a graphics processor, memory controller, and video
encoder/decoder.
But Intel plans to release its big gun in 2011. Codenamed
Medfield, the third-generation of the platform will be a 32-nm,
Atom-based system-on-chip that will likely be Intel's first real
competitor to the ARM architecture that dominates the smartphone
market today through a variety of vendors, such as Broadcom,
Qualcomm, Samsung and Texas Instruments.
In addition, Intel has partnered with Nokia, the world's largest
mobile-phone maker, in developing its technology for the
smartphone.
"There's people who believe there's no way Intel can come in,"
Gartner analyst Leslie Fiering said. "But Intel is very serious in
designing for the smartphone, and when they get there, they will
bring development tools and a lot of (processing) power to
burn."