“They like to announce the intent first,” said John Spooner, an analyst with Technology Business Research. “They’re putting a stake in the ground, saying, we have a partnership, and we want everyone to know.”
Spooner told eWEEK the relationship was likely finalised over the last couple of weeks and Intel and Nokia are ironing out the road map at this time. “I’m not sure they’re going to have products for some time, but I’m sure they will. If they’re designing products together, though, it’s going to take some time,” he said.
Intel wants to be in the next iPhone
“Intel would like nothing better than to power the iPhone. Intel wants to be in the 2010 iPhone,” Spooner told eWEEK. “The big picture is that Intel is designing an ecosystem around ultramobile processors—it’s viewing the mobile phone market, which is about three times bigger than the PC market, and it wants a piece of that. Intel’s next several billion dollars are going to come from handsets, not PCs.”
“Paul Otellini has brought stronger vision and leadership to the position [of Intel’s CEO] than his predecessors,” said Pund-IT’s King. “Given Intel’s capabilities in the market, I’d see them as a threat. But until devices come out, Texas Instruments and Qualcomm and others will be playing a wait-and-see game, and are making their own plans.”
King added with some pleasure, “It’s going to be an interesting year.”
Page: 1 2
Smartphone and electronics maker Xiaomi now aims to deliver 130,000 electric vehicles this year after…
US Commerce Department finalises $6.6bn subsidy to TSMC for leading-edge chip plants in Arizona, as…
SpaceX to begin tender offer in December valuing company at $210bn, as Elon Musk's xAI…
US Department of Homeland Security releases advice for development and deployment of AI in critical…
World's biggest PC maker Lenovo beats sales predictions, raises forecast for 2025 as AI capabilities,…
Chip production slows in China in October ahead of expected export controls, while annual EV…