| Thread Tools |
29th July 2019, 08:20 | #1 |
[M] Reviewer Join Date: May 2010 Location: Romania
Posts: 153,541
| Apple's buys Intel's modem business Top analyst says it is all about 5G Apple has confirmed that after knifing Intel's modem business by returning to Qualcomm, it has bought the business. Moor Insights & Strategy analyst Anshel Sag (pictured) has said the move is all about 5G, which was one of the reasons why Apple abandoned Intel. The fruity cargo cult has written a billion dollar cheque for the majority of Intel's modem business including its 2,200 staff. The deal includes IP, equipment, leases and Sag said the deal was destined to be, from the very day that Apple announced Intel would be its modem supplier of choice. Intel struggled to compete with the likes of Qualcomm, and delays eventually led Apple to switch suppliers back to Qualcomm which took away Intel’s biggest and most significant modem customer and they’re lucky to have gotten at least something for their efforts. Writing in Forbes, Sag said that Apple has wanted to build its own modems for a long time. Apple’s entire chip business is predicated on integration and cost optimisation. Apple owns the operating system and it owns the SoC, so why shouldn’t it also own the modem? Its biggest silicon competitor is Qualcomm, which already integrates its modems into its Snapdragon SoCs. Apple loves to do things in-house and if it can, it will. Modems are just the next step on Apple’s journey to integration, albeit perhaps one of the most expensive and complex steps to date. Intel’s biggest push on modems really began last year when it announced it would spin up a 1,000+ person 5G modem division in San Diego. That was increased to 1,200 people earlier this year, announced days before Apple’s now settled lawsuit with Qualcomm began in San Diego. Sag thinks that Apple will continue to expand and hire. Apple acquired Intel’s modem business because it would have taken it a minimum of five to 10 years to build a modem business of its own from scratch. With Intel’s teams and IP, it can likely shorten the time to three to five years for a top-to-bottom Apple design. He thinks Apple will build a SoC with a built-in modem within that timeframe. Apple likely isn’t married to Intel’s fabs, it can probably go with its already TSMC-optimised SoC designs and manufacture a chip with a modem inside with fewer problems. https://fudzilla.com/news/mobile/491...modem-business |
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Apple to Buy Bulk of Intel’s Smartphone Modem Business For $1 Billion | Stefan Mileschin | WebNews | 0 | 26th July 2019 08:20 |
Apple is picking at Intel's modem corpse | Stefan Mileschin | WebNews | 0 | 23rd July 2019 13:58 |
Apple in 'advanced' discussions to buy Intel's modem division | Stefan Mileschin | WebNews | 0 | 23rd July 2019 13:44 |
Corsair buys Elgato's gaming business to get into livestreaming | Stefan Mileschin | WebNews | 0 | 28th June 2018 20:25 |
Lenovo buys a controlling stake in Fujitsu's PC business | Stefan Mileschin | WebNews | 0 | 5th November 2017 19:06 |
HP buys Samsung's printer business | Stefan Mileschin | WebNews | 0 | 13th September 2016 09:01 |
Sony buys Toshiba out of the sensor business for $155 million | Stefan Mileschin | WebNews | 0 | 7th December 2015 19:57 |
Verizon buys Intel's TV business | Stefan Mileschin | WebNews | 0 | 22nd January 2014 08:05 |
Intel warned not to take Apple's business | Stefan Mileschin | WebNews | 0 | 14th December 2012 17:10 |
VNU Business Media Europe buys the INQUIRER | jmke | WebNews | 0 | 26th January 2006 18:43 |
Thread Tools | |
| |