The Morphing of Intel's Monopoly
It was a generation ago that Intel, less than three years old has created the three fundamental building blocks of the compute era: the DRAM, the EPROM and the Microprocessor, an incredible feat of innovation by any measure. Manufacturing yield, not power or performance determined success of failure and in the first two decades 2nd sourcing was required for end customers to adopt the new products. Intel, though, lost control to a throng of well-capitalized DRAM competitors and would be a footnote in history if IBM had not selected the 8088 for the original PC and allowed Intel to pursue a sole source strategy. History is once again knocking at the door as the company returns to a manufacturing centricity that looks to remain a sole source supplier for the mobile computing era while leveraging its assets for complementary partners, especially those who service the Data Center build out. The transition from Paul Otellini to Brian Krzanich and Renee James will signal something even greater though, it will be the transformation of Intel to a monopoly not of architecture but one based on software.
To read the full article, click here
Related Semiconductor IP
- Ultra-Low-Power LPDDR3/LPDDR2/DDR3L Combo Subsystem
- Parameterizable compact BCH codec
- 1G BASE-T Ethernet Verification IP
- Network-on-Chip (NoC)
- Microsecond Channel (MSC/MSC-Plus) Controller
Related Blogs
- From DIY To Advanced NoC Solutions: The Future Of MCU Design
- Guarding against the threat of clock attacks with analog IP
- Arm Compute Platform at the Heart of Malaysia’s Silicon Vision
- Imagination and Renesas Redefine the Role of the GPU in Next-Generation Vehicles
Latest Blogs
- Rivian’s autonomy breakthrough built with Arm: the compute foundation for the rise of physical AI
- AV1 Image File Format Specification Gets an Upgrade with AVIF v1.2.0
- Industry’s First End-to-End eUSB2V2 Demo for Edge AI and AI PCs at CES
- Integrating Post-Quantum Cryptography (PQC) on Arty-Z7
- UA Link PCS customizations from 800GBASE-R Ethernet PCS Clause 172