Smartphones powered by Intel Atom processors
should start appearing on the market in the second half of 2011,
according to company President and CEO Paul Otellini.
Speaking at the Barclays Capital Global Technology
Conference in San Francisco Dec. 8, Otellini reportedly said the new
smartphones will be powered by Intel’s upcoming “Medfield” 32-nanometer
Atom processor.
The move would enable Intel to become a much more
significant challenger to ARM Holdings, whose chip designs are used by
such vendors as Qualcomm, Samsung and Texas Instruments, and are found
in most of the smartphones on the market today. Intel officials have
made no secret of their desire to expand the company’s reach beyond its
traditional PC and server businesses, and they see the rapidly growing
and increasingly competitive smartphone space as a natural target
market.
According to a Reuters report, Otellini said he saw the looming competition with ARM as a “marathon, not a sprint.”
Medfield reportedly is sampling now and will be
shipping next year and in 2012. Otellini reportedly did not mention
names of manufacturers who will roll out the Atom-based smartphones.
During the same talk, Otellini also said that
tablet PC makers have said they will use Intel’s Atom processors in 35
different tablet designs. Apple reinvigorated the tablet PC space
earlier this year with the launch of its iPad, and now controls more
than 90 percent of the market.
Click here for a look at some Atom-powered tablets.
However, challengers are beginning to come onto
the market, and a host of vendors—from Dell and Samsung to Research In
Motion, Hewlett-Packard and Lenovo—are coming out with their own tablet
PCs, and Intel officials want in on the market. At its Intel Developer
Forum in September, the company had a wide range of tablets on display
running Atom, some of which were on the market. More such systems are
expected to be put on display during the Consumer Electronics Show next
month.
While Otellini spoke, a slide behind him listed a
number of brands, including Dell, Asus, Lenovo and Toshiba, according
to Reuters.
Intel has two Atom platforms for tablet PCs—“Oak
Trail” for tablets running Windows, and “Moorestown” for those running
Google’s Android mobil OS and MeeGo, a Linux-based operating system
developed by Intel and Nokia.
Intel rival Advanced Micro Devices also is planning a push into tablets.
AMD’s roadmap includes “Krishna” and “Wichita,” 28-nm processors that
are due out in 2012. The two- and four-core processors will be APUs
(accelerated processing units), which have the graphics processor and
CPU on the same piece of silicon.
Just as Intel and AMD are planning incursions into
fields traditionally dominated by ARM-designed chips, ARM is taking aim
at the data center, particularly for smaller servers used in such
environments as cloud computing. ARM officials several months ago
unveiled plans for its Cortex-A15 processor design, which includes such
key server features as support for virtualization, up to 16 cores and
more memory capacity.
Chip and systems makers also are looking to push
ARM designs into the data center. Marvell in November showed off its
quad-core Armada XP chip, which runs at 1.6GHz and includes a such
server features as up to 2MB of Level 2 cache and 4 PCI Express Gen 2.0
units. Calxeda—formerly known as Smooth-Stone—also is looking to ARM-designed chips for servers.