Freescale to Contribute Chips to Netbooks Shipping this Year
Freescale Semiconductor has announced that the first netbooks using
its chips will debut this year, with shipments reaching 1.5 million
units by 2010, according to Bloomberg.
In January, at the Consumer Electronics Show, the company first displayed its
new netbook-intended design, which it calls the i.MX515, and which
features a system-on-a-chip platform based on an ARM Cortex-A8 processor.
Once the semiconductor division of Motorola, Freescale makes
microprocessors, microcontrollers, power management solutions and other
embedded products for automotive, consumer, industrial, networking and
wireless applications.
With General Motors, a large customer, filing for bankruptcy on June 1,
Freescale is ready to grow new opportunities.
"The exciting thing for us in that space is that it's all potential new
revenue growth because we don't have a business in that," Henri
Richard, Freescale chief sales and marketing officer, told Bloomberg.
Additionally, Richard told Bloomberg that Freescale expects to sell
three or four chips for each device, for a revenue of about $20 per
netbook - or, "smartbook," as it calls them - and that some of the
chips will be based on ARM technology.
He also expects the first smartbooks to ship running the Linux
operating system Ubuntu, while later models may run Google's Android.
Freescale envisions smartbooks as devices featuring screens larger than
those of smartphones, are cloud-computing-centric and offer persistent
connectivity, all-day battery life and instant-on functionality, much
like a cell phone.
However, it wanted to show that they could be a new category - versus
simply mimicking PC clamshell designs - and so it challenged young
designers at the Savannah College of Art and Design (SCAD) to rethink
the form factor with Freescale's i.MX515 processor in mind.
Freescale is currently displaying its favorite SCAD prototypes at the
Computex show in Taiwan. While these are not the smartbook designs that
will be shipping this year, they offer a glimpse at what's possible, in
part through low-power operation and no need for a fan.
Today the majority of netbooks run the Intel Atom processor, and netbook sales have contributed to Intel's considerable market dominance.
However, with the introduction of its new ultra-low voltage processor
on June 2, Uday Marty, Intel's director of basic mobility platforms,
said that, more than netbooks, "Ultra-thin laptops are the new phenomenon."
Editor's Note: This story has been changed to reflect corrections regarding Freescale's attitude toward the automotive industry, which it says it is still 100 percent committed to and focused on.
