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News Otellini predicts ARM's Transmeta-like fate

Discussion in 'Article Discussion' started by Gareth Halfacree, 26 Oct 2012.

  1. Gareth Halfacree

    Gareth Halfacree WIIGII! Lover of bit-tech Administrator Super Moderator Moderator

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  2. Snips

    Snips I can do dat, giz a job

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    With all the mobile and tablet exposure ARM has, I feel it would be a little premature to be saying they will fall away like previous manufacturers. Personally, I see them as more of a threat to Intel than AMD at the moment.
     
  3. rollo

    rollo Modder

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    As long as the big 2 phone suppliers ( apple and Samsung ) post record sales numbers how can ARM Fail. Unless Intel has decided it wants to be apples/ Samsungs chip supplier.
     
  4. V3ctor

    V3ctor Tech addict...

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    Intel has something up their sleeves... I believe that a "cutted in half" Haswell in 14nm or even at 22nm will be very powerfull, I read something in another (good) site about this and it makes sense, let's just see what happens.
     
  5. John_T

    John_T Minimodder

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    The lady doth protest too much, methinks...
     
  6. r3loaded

    r3loaded Minimodder

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    No, ARM will not go the way of Transmeta, but at the same time it won't slay Chipzilla. I believe both architectures are here to stay, they'll continue to coexist while providing healthy competition for each other. This is the best outcome for consumers as we'll be seeing more low power Intel chips and more powerful ARM chips.
     
  7. Gareth Halfacree

    Gareth Halfacree WIIGII! Lover of bit-tech Administrator Super Moderator Moderator

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    I agree, but at the same time the historian in me is waving his arms around and shouting "ooh, sir, sir, me sir, I know this one sir."

    Back in the mists of time - OK, it was the 1980s - two companies ruled the roost in the UK home microcomputer market: Sinclair and Acorn. Acorn had got where it was by producing mid-priced but very powerful computers designed by engineers; Sinclair by producing bargain-basement and significantly less powerful systems designed by accountants. Both filled a niche, and both were pretty much obsessed with wiping each other out. (As an aside, there's a good reason for that: Chris Curry quit Sinclair when Uncle Clive wouldn't support his MK14 microcomputer project, leaving to found Acorn with Hermann Hauser.)

    That obsession basically killed both companies: Sinclair decided to attack Acorn by going up-market with higher-price and more powerful devices, culminating in the incredibly unsuccessful Sinclair QL, or Quantum Leap; at the same time, Acorn went downmarket with the Electron, aiming to knock Sinclair's Spectrum off the bargain-basement shelves. Both companies failed miserably, and when the Great Microcomputer Crash hit went bankrupt.

    Now, to be fair, there were other factors at play here: Acorn had overestimated demand for the Electron, and ended up with warehouses full of 'em and no capital; Sinclair ploughed millions of his company's cash into the C5 electric vehicle project, an abject failure that sold fewer than 12,000 units. The slump in the market, of course, affected all companies equally. Nevertheless, it seems likely that had Acorn stuck to its roots and likewise Sinclair, the two companies would have been in a better position to weather the financial storm that was to follow.

    Why the history lesson? ARM and Intel are in positions very much like Sinclair and Acorn: ARM produces low-cost low-power chips built to a definite budget, while Intel offers higher-power and higher-priced parts for users who require extra oomph. Both are market leaders in their own fields, and both are attempting to muscle in on each others' markets with a dramatic change in tactics: ARM is going upmarket with the Cortex-A15, adding in features like virtualisation extensions that take up valuable silicon and increase the cost of the chips, while Intel is going down-market with its low-power Atom system-on-chip designs.

    ARM (a company born from the ashes of Acorn, funnily enough, with a name that was once an acronym for Acorn RISC Machines) isn't wasting money like Sinclair did, however, and Intel has enough money to spare that if it wants to it could just go ahead and *buy* ARM - but the similarities between the two battles are striking.

    Hmm. Should have pitched that as a feature, really. Bah!
     
  8. John_T

    John_T Minimodder

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    Still worth a punt, you could flesh it out a bit more and stick it up as a feature. There was a TV documentary that covered this a few years back now that was interesting, but most of the non-UK readers won't have seen it, (and probably a fair few UK readers missed it as well). Interesting stuff, and there are parallels to be drawn.... (Though I'm sure both current companies would deny it vociferously!)
     
  9. greigaitken

    greigaitken Minimodder

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    Intel has for ages had the best manufacturing. Such a strong position offsets any modest chip design inefficiencies and magnifies a good design . Intels position is like an exothermic reaction with only the worlds money as a throttle. Unless some massive group combined resources - nobody will catch intel as nobody can match their R & D, or fab money. Plus even if the money was equal - intel have more expertise etc. You cant beat intel. If i was ARM - i'd try not to grab intels attention while making some money. If they take too much server market share intel will just squash them within a decade.
    P.S. i dont like intel much but i recognise how good they are at turning sand into money.
     
  10. rollo

    rollo Modder

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    Intel has the fab space to take over whatever chip sector it so desires. I think if Intel made a low powered high performance chip for mobile phones and marketed it to apple and samsung at similar prices to ARM, the Arm chips would say bye bye quickly due to the existing deals samsung and apple already have with intel.

    Thats the 2 main players in the mobile phone space at this moment, Where arm is prevailent, Getting a chip for tablet implementation is probably easier due to the battery not been as big as an issue.

    Arm is basically a licence company as it does not have its own FAB, Nor does it see alot of the profits from its chip, If it was in intels position it would be making billions of dollars just from samsung and apple instead tsmc and samsung make the billions.
     
  11. bulldogjeff

    bulldogjeff The modding head is firmly back on.

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    I think that about sums it up. I think he's scared and trying to show some bravado.
     
  12. Anfield

    Anfield Multimodder

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    I don't believe Arm will fail anytime soon, the mobile market is growing too fast for that.
     
  13. Elton

    Elton Officially a Whisky Nerd

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    ARM won't fail, but I think that the mobile market inflation is slowly going to deflate. Phones can only get so fast and the same applies to tablets. Sure you can have a huge surge in them, but when it comes productivity, they're null.

    My own hunch is that ARM's business will slow down (well to be honest, it's low margin SoC designs anyways, and it basically just makes money from licensing) within the next 5 years. But truth be told, it won't fail. Many more units will be using ARM based components for a long time. Hell, most televisions and monitors use ARM based logic boards.
     
  14. barny2767

    barny2767 What's a Dremel?

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    the only reason Intel sells so many of its low power chips is thanks to there deals with Dell, you cant get anything but Intel chips from them and the only thing that would kill ARM is for intel to make some questionable deals with members of ARMs prime market and I wouldnt put it passed them to try. I think ARM and AMD need to join forces and somehow give Intel a good slap in the face as there becoming like Microsoft in the days when Apple wher not a big worry for them.
     
  15. l3v1ck

    l3v1ck Fueling the world, one oil well at a time.

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    It makes you wonder why Intel don't just license ARM and use their superior manufacturing process to wipe the floor with other ARM licensees. It's not as if that would break the bank, they just can't stand the idea.
     
  16. Anfield

    Anfield Multimodder

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    I'd say we still have at least 5 years of massive growth ahead of us in the mobile market and for after that? well companies like Dell and Sony are currently releasing Ultrabook / Tablet hybrids, if the blurring of the line between pc / mobile continues ARM very much has a chance to take a serious chunk of market share from Intel, who in my opinion have simply been caught napping.

    Of course there are also potential problems, like for example the brutal price war currently waging between chinese smartphone manufacturers like Xiaomi, Huawei and so on which is likely to put massive pressure on component pricing, or Intel waking up...

    But if ARM can keep putting out competitive products for the next couple years they should be established well enough to be able to survive the inevitable market saturation and the "good enough" effect that will come eventually.
     
  17. Elton

    Elton Officially a Whisky Nerd

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    True, when the lines are blurred though, we'll either end up with Ultra low powered X64 processors or high powered RISC ARM based processors. As it is right now, it seems that the lines are slowly but surely converging. That said, high volume low margin seems to be ARMs prerogative and the inverse for Intel.

    The price wars would harm mostly the manufacturers more than ARM itself as they sell the licenses as far as I know. As long as they keep advancing at a steady pace, ARM is secure. But buying power wise, ARM is puny compared to Intel who have their own fab plants. Market saturation or not, ARM's competition is with the Atom SoCs in the coming years and while Intel has the margin cost covered (R&D and fabrication) the majority of SoCs are still ARM powered. Once market saturation has reached a high, the value of smartphones will lower. It'll be common enough. It won't mean sales will be harder to drive, but lower. Upgrade cycles slower.
     
  18. Eldorado

    Eldorado Needs new glasses..

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    I'd like to think ARM is here to stay, though if Intel don't get their own way, they'll cheat... Again.
     
  19. fluxtatic

    fluxtatic What's a Dremel?

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    Intel hates to admit they're wrong - Intel is a former ARM architecture licensee. They had a joint venture with Marvell, XScale, which they then sold out to Marvell in '06.

    If Apple can make what is alleged to be the most kick-ass ARM processor on the market (A6), imagine what Intel could do if they threw a few billion dollars at it.

    As to trying to outcompete with x86 to Apple and Samsung, never going to happen. Maybe other OEMs, but not these two (and the rest don't really matter, do they?) What makes Apple's dick hard is control - Apple has had the A6 in the works for years - you don't just pull what appears to be a processor laid out by hand out of your ass - Apple's been working toward this for a good, long while. As for Samsung, Intel can't compete on price. Given that Samsung produces their own Exynos processors that probably cost $5 apiece, how can Intel compete? Samsung will be happy to buy Clovertrail and those that follow, but there's no way they would give up ARM to become dependent on Intel.

    Intel needs to muscle their way into mobile, but it's not where they're going to make the bulk of their money. Traditional PCs and servers aren't going away, and we're a good long ways away from ARM having marketshare larger than AMD in the server room, let alone Intel.

    I think it's time for Otellini to shut up - he's beginning to sound increasingly desperate, when Intel's position in the market has never been stronger (remember, in their 'weak' quarter, they 'only' had $13bil in revenue, not the $14bil expected.)
     
  20. Action_Parsnip

    Action_Parsnip What's a Dremel?

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    I really do not see Intel bothering Arm that much, and yes I think it's Arm's party to be crashed not Intel's. Arm is a franchise, an idea. It has grown to the near defacto standard in the low-power world because of the freedom the license grants to those who buy it.

    It both grants access to i.p. (and excellent i.p. at that) and makes the licensee intimately involved in the evolution of that i.p. It has gone soo sooo far because it is cheap to get into, incredibly *good* at providing low-power processing power and it has put the manufacturers at the very heart of the success of the future of the 'franchise' as a whole.

    It's more idea versus a single manufacturer's product, Intel belonging to the latter, with all the freedom of manufacture, form and implementation that provides without the gun-to-your-throat near-total submission to that one all-powerful supplier otherwise entailed.

    So it isn't company A versus company B as such, it's one manufacturer versus ....... every other manufacturer and what they have invested in and nurtured up to that point, with much simpler (and cheaper) licensing costs.

    Not to mention the hardware itself is exceptionally good at providing processing power at the most miniscule of power consumption levels. Lets not forget that with A15 coming soon, Arm might very well leapfrog Atom, even on one-size-fits-all bulk processes....
     

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