IT이야기2015. 11. 18. 10:04

이런거 보면 삼성 진짜 대단하단 생각이 듭니다. 어마어마한 돈도 투자하고 엔지니어들고 갈아 넣었겠지만, 쉽지 않았지만 이제 세계 선두권에서 경쟁할수 있다고 봐도 될정도입니다.

첫번째 삼성의 custom ARM Core가 될테고요. custom core를 design할수 있는 회사는 애플, 퀄컴, 삼성 말고는 없습니다.

GPU는 ARM의 Mali T-880

Modem도 LTE Rel.12 Cat.12/13 지원으로 어디에도 꿀리지 않을것 같고


지역에 따라 어떤 모델은 퀄컴 S820(MSM8996)이 쓰일텐데 1대1 benchmark에서도 10-15% 우위에 있을것으로 생각이 됩니다. 1월에 출시되면 다이다이로 밴치마크가 빨리 올라오면 좋겠네요.


GPU도 좀더 차별화하고 강화하려면 AMD를 사던지 하면 좋겠네요.


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Samsung Unveils the Latest Application Processor, Exynos 8 Octa, Built on 14-Nanometer FinFET Process Technology

http://global.samsungtomorrow.com/samsung-unveils-the-latest-application-processor-exynos-8-octa-built-on-14-nanometer-finfet-process-technology/


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http://www.stuff.tv/me/news/samsung-shows-new-exynos-8-octa-processor

Like the Snapdragon 820, the new Exynos offering will also integrate the latest LTE tech - meaning download speeds of up to 600Mbps. Perfect for streaming 4K on the divine display the Galaxy S7 will likely be toting.

Talking of the 820, the side-by-side performance of the two next-gen chips is the real story here. With the (in)famous Samsung split from Snapdragon for the Galaxy S6, how the 820 holds up alongside the Exynos 8890 could be pivotal for Qualcomm.

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http://www.sammobile.com/2015/11/16/rumored-model-numbers-for-snapdragon-820-and-exynos-8890-powered-galaxy-s7-and-galaxy-s7-edge/

As per this list the Galaxy S7 (SM-G930) and the Galaxy S7 edge (SM-G935) will be available with either the Snapdragon or Exynos processor depending upon markets and wireless carriers. The Snapdragon 820 powered models are listed for China (SM-G9300, SM-G9350), Verizon (SM-G930V, SM-G935V), Sprint (SM-G930P, SM-G935P) and US Cellular (SM-G930R4, SM-G935R4). It’s interesting to note that all of these are apparently destined for CDMA carriers.

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http://seekingalpha.com/article/3679336-the-new-samsung-exynos-8890-is-bad-news-for-qualcomm-in-2-ways

The New Samsung Exynos 8890 Is Bad News For Qualcomm In 2 Ways


Posted by 쁘레드
IT이야기2015. 11. 16. 04:11

*주의: 아래 제품을 사용해본적이 없으며 추천도 하지 않습니다.


이베이에서 스마트와치를 추천하길래 눌러놨습니다 깜짝놀랐습니다. 디자인에 놀라고 가격에 두번 놀랐습니다. 뭐 이건 장난감으로 사도 되겠습니다.

중국의 기술력이 정말 이정도까지 빠른가요? 한번 모방할것만 잡으면 6개월내에 비슷하게 만들어 내는 실력을 여러회사가 가지고 있다고 봐도 무방하겠습니다. 모든 분야에서요. 물론 가격이 말하듯 LCD도 후질테고(TFT) 배터리도 오래안갈것으로 예상됩니다.


시계정도 사이즈에 모뎀(Modem)을 집어넣어 전화기능을 가능하게 했습니다. 이건 좀 어려운 기술력이다고 생각되어졌었는데요, 미디어텍 등의 기술력이 누구나 자기것을 받아다 만들수 있게해주나 봅니다. 스마트 밴드(fitness tracker, 건강 트랙커)와 함께 전화정도 지원하는 wearable이 아이들 하니씩 비상용으로 필요하다고 인식될분야라 생각하고 있었는데 중국은 벌써 진출했네요.


어쨋든 하드웨어만 생산하는 회사들은 이제 만들어 먹고 살게 없습니다. 중국으로 빨리 이전하든지 접던지 해야지요. 한국 업체들 특히나 걱정 많이됩니다.


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LG따라한것 같은 느낌


애플은 안따라할수가 없지요.


GSM/GPRS 심카드 지원!!! 아마도 미디어텍 AP와 모뎀인것으로 추정.

GSM/GPRS 850/900/1800/1900 four frequency conversation




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이것은 삼성을 따라한것 같은데 한번 더 자빠질 내용은 SIM카드를 지원해서 GSM/GPRS네트워크를 통해 전화와 data를 지원하는것 같습니다. 헐~ 미디어텍 AP와 모뎀인것 같습니다. 어떻게 이런가격에 이런 스펙이 되지요? 배터리는 어떻게 버티고요? 4시간만에 충전해야하고 그렇지는 않겠죠?


Features :

  • MTK6260A 533MHz
  • GSM 850/900/1800/1900 MHz, single sim card
  • Bluetooth dialer, call reminder, Bluetooth phone
  • Bluetooth SMS, instant messaging push
  • 1.56 "TFT LCD touch screen 240 * 240 pixels
  • With camera, support video
  • Anti lost feature
  • Pedometer, sleep monitoring, sedentary reminder
  • Music and video player
  • Calendar (can be synchronized)


Posted by 쁘레드
IT이야기2015. 8. 17. 06:22

지금까지 퀄컴이 독점공급했던 아이폰에 Iphone 6S부터 인텔이 50% 정도 공급하는 vendor로 참여하게 됐습니다. 인텔입장에서는 오래동안 숙원사업이 이루어진것이고요, 독점지위를 유지하던 퀄컴은 또다른 매출 쇼크를 맞게 됐습니다. 다행히 모뎀은 매출 기여도는 높지만 순이익 기여도는 낮아서 다행인 면이 있습니다.

Iphone 6S, 6S plus, 6c(아직 정확하진 않지만) 어떻게 퀄컴과 인텔이 나눠가질지 궁금한데, 지금까지 뉴스로는 주요 시장은 퀄컴칩으로 아시아나 남미시장은 인텔칩으로 간다는 얘기가 있습니다.

인텔은 애플과의 계약으로 인해 내년에 $1B($750Mㅡ - $1.25B)정도 매출에 도움이 될거라고 합니다.



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Intel modems may be in up to half of next-gen iPhone shipments, analyst estimates

Chipmaker Intel may have won as much as half of the orders for modems in Apple's next-generation iPhones shipping this fall, an analyst with Northland Capital Markets claimed on Wednesday.

Apple has been considering an Intel modem "for a while," according to Gus Richard, who didn't identify a specific chip in an investor memo. In March a report sugested that Apple would use Intel's XMM 7360 LTE modem, but only in 2016 and for markets like Asia and Latin America.

Assuming a 50 percent order share, Richard suggested that Intel could generate an extra $750 million to $1.25 billion in revenue during 2016.

"This is a marque win for Intel and would go a long way to reducing the mobile business losses," he wrote.

Although Intel is an overwhelming force when it comes to desktop, laptop, and server processors, the growth of smartphones and tablets has undermined it financially. Most smartphones are based on processors with ARM architecture, including the iPhone, although Apple performs heavy customization to suit its needs.

Modem production is likely well underway for upcoming iPhone models. Apple may announce the new devices as soon as September 9, and launch them later in the month — typically, the company needs between one and two months of non-stop manufacturing to build up launch stock.

It's still uncertain whether there are only two new models planned — commonly referred to as the iPhone 6s and 6s Plus — or if Apple is also working on an iPhone 6c, which might potentially revive the 4-inch display size used for the iPhone 5, 5s, and 5c.

http://appleinsider.com/articles/15/08/12/intel-modems-may-be-in-up-to-half-of-next-gen-iphone-shipments-analyst-estimates

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Analyst: expect Intel LTE modems to find their way in up to 50% of Apple's iPhone 6S shipments

According to an analyst from Northland Capital Markets, we might be in for one of the strangest of partnerships between two tech giants next month. If a new report is to be believed, half of the phones from the upcoming iPhone 6S series will make use of Intel 4G LTE modems.

Gus Richard, an analyst with North Capital Markets, recently stated that Intel has won orders for half of Apple's iPhone 6S and iPhone 6S Plus shipments. According to Apple Insider, this information lines up well with reports dating back in March which claimed that Apple is planning to integrate Intel's XMM 7360 LTE modem in the iPhone 6S series units that will be sold in markets around Asia and Latin America. 

Although Intel dominates the processor market when it comes to traditional computing machines such as desktops, laptops, and servers, Intel's mobile arm has been reporting huge financial losses during the past years. Reports claim that Intel has been heavily subsidizing its tablet processors in an attempt to catch a foothold among entry-level tablet makers in China, although Chipzilla has been unable to compete with ARM designs, either stock or custom, which find their way in the vast majority of smartphones and tablets models. 

According to Richard, this new deal with Apple will translate into a substantial revenue for Intel during 2016, one that will help alleviate some of the pain of its mobile division. The analyst estimates that Intel could generate somewhere between $750 million and $1.25 billion in revenue, which "would go a long way to reducing the mobile business losses". These are good revenue numbers, and Intel will surely welcome the cash despite the fact that company is primarily a processor designer and manufacturer, not a company that specializes in LTE modems.

If this report is accurate, chances are that Intel is currently hard at work manufacturing LTE modems for the first batch of iPhone 6S and iPhone 6S Plus shipments, as multiple reports hinted that Apple's supply chain has already started mass manufacturing components for the next iPhone generation. According to recent reports, Apple will unveil the iPhone 6S generation on September 9, with commercial availability estimated to arrive later in the month. While the iPhone 6S and the iPhone 6S Plus are a lock for this fall, it remains to be seen if the often-rumored iPhone 6C will see an unveiling next month along the two premium smartphones.

http://www.phonearena.com/news/Analyst-expect-Intel-LTE-modems-to-find-their-way-in-up-to-50-of-Apples-iPhone-6S-shipments_id72574#SB6XxJ77TZxwIuYt.99


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Posted by 쁘레드
경제이야기/Stock2015. 7. 24. 03:04

미디어텍 상황입니다. 한줄 요약은 성장 동력이 꺽이고 있는것으로 보입니다. 

미디어텍이 대만업체라서 중국에서 독주가 오래가지 않을거라 생각하고 있습니다.

퀄컴이 실적이 안좋은 것도 미디어텍과 관련이 없는것 같습니다.

중국 시장에서 인텔을 업은 spreadtrum이 약진하고 있습니다. 미디어텍은 LTE시장에서 성장은 하고 있찌만 아직까지 모뎀쪽이 원하는 수준까지 성장을 못하고 있는것 같습니다.

Marvell, NVidia가 모바일 시장에서 철수하면 그 파이를 누가 가지게 될까요? 누가 날개를 달게될까요.

(좀더 조사해서 update예정)

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Posted by 쁘레드
IT이야기2015. 3. 13. 03:04
QCOM에게는 안좋은 소식이네요. MSM은 삼성에게 까이고, Modem은 Apple에게 까이면 주요 매출 소스가 없어지게 됩니다.
Intel도 매출은 늘릴수 있지만 순익은 별로 없을거라고 하고, 최고 승자는 역시 경쟁붙여서 좋은 가격으로 납품받는 슈퍼갑 Apple이 되겠네요.
Intel은 modem만으로 끝내지 않고 AP도 같이 팔려고 할꺼라는데, Apple것이 너무 좋아 쉽게 넘어가지는 않을것 같고, 다만 Apple칩을 Intel Fab에서 생산하는것은 가능할지 모르겠네요. 삼성 견제도 되고요.

기사에 포함된 supplier 그래픽이 너무 좋네요.



Source : http://seekingalpha.com/article/2995886-apple-selects-an-intel-modem-a-glimpse-of-the-future


Summary

  • The report that Apple has chosen an Intel modem for use in a future iPhone has encouraged Intel supporters.
  • However, modem sales do not represent a “foot in the door” for Intel to sell mobile SOCs to Apple.
  • Instead, it's an example of commodity chipmakers fighting for second tier supplier status to a major mobile device maker.

Venture Beat's report on March 10 that an Intel (NASDAQ:INTC) modem had been selected by Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) for an upcoming iPhone targeted at emerging markets had Intel bulls salivating, but the celebration was short lived, after Intel lowered its guidance for the March quarter. The modem selection, if it goes through, does offer a glimpse of the future for Intel and Apple, but perhaps not the future Intel bulls have in mind.

Commodity Mentality

One of the things I've noticed in writing for SA for the past almost two years is that fans of Intel also tend to be fans of other large chipmakers, especially Qualcomm (NASDAQ:QCOM) and Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA). It's understandable in retrospect, since they share a common business model as commodity IC manufacturers. Writing in 2013, it struck me as odd, since it was apparent to me that the companies were on a collision course with business objectives that were ultimately mutually exclusive.

With the news that Apple had selected an Intel LTE modem rather than going with its long-time modem supplier Qualcomm, we witnessed just the sort of collision I had in mind. But the ramifications are greater than just the competition between Intel and Qualcomm.

The manufacture of systems on chip (SOCs) for mobile devices continues to shift from the commodity paradigm (Intel, Qualcomm, Nvidia) to the custom paradigm pioneered by Apple in the A4 SOC for the first iPad. More importantly for the commodity processor makers, consumer interest has continued to shift away from commodity PCs in favor of mobile devices. Intel's revised guidance for the March quarter was due primarily to declining PC sales, which Intel attributed to slower than expected business and XP refresh sales.

But PC sales have suffered for some time as a result of competition from mobile devices, and the increasing capability of mobile devices has many consumers and businesses thinking outside of the PC box. At the same time, Apple's success with the latest iPhone 6 and 6 Plus has made the custom paradigm dominant in the mobile device world. This has exerted a Darwinian survival pressure on commodity IC makers in general, and the industry has evolved in order to try to adapt to the new paradigm.

One of the features of this evolution has been considerable consolidation in the industry, with the Freescale/NPX merger being only the most recent. This was proudly highlighted in a chart by Intel CFO Stacy Smith for their annual Investor Meeting:

(click to enlarge)

Intel's naiveté about what the chart truly portends is almost touching. One of the very important survival strategies for the commodity IC makers is to become a preferred supplier of one of the big mobile device makers such as Apple. Here, commodity ICs still have a role to play by supplying functionality that hasn't been incorporated into the SOC.

But it's a role that must get smaller with time, as more and more functionality becomes integrated into the SOC. Thus the decline in the number of suppliers highlighted in the Intel chart.

The shrinking role for secondary commodity ICs has been masked by a number of near-term effects, not the least of which is the sheer growth in the mobile device business since the advent of the iPhone. Another effect has been the incorporation of greater functionality into smartphones themselves, which has often mandated accessory ICs for things such as motion sensors and communications devices such as the NFC radios incorporated into iPhone 6 to support Apple Pay.

The potential loss by Qualcomm of Apple's modem business brings into focus the ongoing pressure on commodity IC makers. The debut of Samsung's (OTC:SSNLF) Galaxy S6, which will use a Samsung custom SOC rather than a Qualcomm SOC provided the confirmation of the forward guidance provided by Qualcomm management in their fiscal 2015 Q1 earnings release:

Looking ahead, we have lowered our revenue outlook for our semiconductor business for the second half of the fiscal year and lowered our EPS expectations.

These changes are largely driven by the effects of:

  • A shift in share among OEMs at the premium tier, which has reduced our near-term opportunity for sales of our integrated Snapdragon processors and has skewed our product mix towards more modem chipsets in this tier (Apple iPhone 6 impact)

  • Expectations that our Snapdragon 810 processor will not be in the upcoming design cycle of a large customer's flagship device(Samsung Galaxy S6 impact)

  • Heightened competition in China (MediaTek, Rockchip, Spreadtrum, Intel)

Comments in bold parentheses are mine.

Qualcomm guided to effectively flat revenue for its fiscal 2015, based on the above listed effects. As the progenitor of the custom SOC paradigm shift, and the most successful, Apple has pushed Qualcomm into second-tier status as an accessory IC supplier, and forced the competition with Intel. This is not a big win for Intel. Intel wants to be the SOC supplier for the mobile devices of the world, just as it has been the CPU supplier for the PCs of the world. This is the Intel business model that so many still believe in.

Winning on Performance and Cost?

Those who believe in the continuing viability of this business model must assume that Apple will eventually choose Intel for its mobile devices for the same reasons it chose Intel for its personal computers: superiority in performance and cost.

This is an argument by analogy that doesn't hold up under close scrutiny. The superiority in performance and cost of x86 over PowerPC was a direct consequence of the small scale of PowerPC production. The revenue generated by PowerPC was never large enough to allow the manufacturers, IBM (NYSE:IBM) and Motorola, to keep up with Intel either in processor design or in manufacturing.

Apple had entered into the PowerPC alliance in the hope of developing a superior processing architecture to Intel. When it became clear that the PowerPC alliance had failed in that key objective, Apple had no choice but to switch to Intel.

In Intel vs. ARM, the tables have been turned, with the benefits of economies of scale favoring ARM architecture devices. Furthermore, the fabless model prevalent in the ARM world demonstrates that it's not necessary for fabless semiconductor makers to own the means of production. The ARM foundries can spread the benefits of production scale across multiple customers.

The success of the fabless model has enabled Apple to produce its own SOCs without significant cost penalty relative to commodity makers such as Qualcomm or even Intel. Although not everyone has accepted my assertionthat Intel Architecture is significantly cost-disadvantaged relative to ARM, I've not seen anyone assert that Intel can offer a cost advantage without some form of marketing subsidy.

So if Intel cannot offer a cost advantage to Apple, can it at least offer a performance advantage? I wouldn't completely rule this out, since it depends on the resourcefulness and creativity of the systems designers at Intel, which I wouldn't want to minimize. However, I think this is a low probability shot, for a number of reasons.

Intel's performance advantage as a result of manufacturing is likely to be short lived. Certainly, Apple's A8x has been demonstrated to be superior to Bay Trail fabricated on Intel's 22 nm process. Even as Intel began fabricating Cherry Trail (now Atom X5, X7) on its more advanced 14 nm process, Samsung was in production on its own Exynos SOCs, and probably Apple's next generation A-series, on 14 nm FinFET as well.

On the processor design front, Apple has demonstrated that it has a very talented design staff, along with the advantage of using a more modern and efficient CPU architecture in ARM. I doubt that there is any design advantage that Intel can achieve that Apple will not match with its own innovations.

Even if Intel could show some marginal performance advantage for Atom X5-7 compared to Apple's next A-series, Apple would still be reluctant to make a switch. The final advantage that Apple derives from its custom SOCs is that they're... custom. Customization allows Apple to tailor the SOC to the needs of the device. The better integration and efficiency afforded by SOC customization is part of what makes Apple mobile devices work so well. This is perhaps the most important consideration. Apple's custom SOCs give it an important discriminator in the highly competitive mobile device market.

Regardless of whom Apple chooses for its modem supplier, the winner will not be Intel, or Qualcomm, but Apple. Apple will get the best possible product at the lowest possible price, with suppliers falling all over themselves to get and keep Apple's business.

Posted by 쁘레드