• On TV.com: TOP 10 Shows CANCELED Too Soon
March 17, 2008 8:00 AM PDT

Intel endgame is mobile phones

by Brooke Crothers
  • Font size
  • Print
  • Post a comment

For an out-there 2009-2010 chip, Intel's Moorestown seems to get mentioned a lot by executives. If you consider, however, that this silicon may represent Intel's single biggest push into the "very large" mobile phone market, then all that jawboning is understandable.

At recent Intel conferences, CEO Paul Otellini and other high-ranking executives have dropped the Moorestown name frequently. Why? First, it will be Intel's showcase system-on-a-chip, combining the CPU, graphics, and memory controller on a single die, which, in turn, will be combined with other silicon. Second, it will probably serve as the main launching pad for Intel into the mobile phone market. The "first entry into phone form factors," as Intel has stated. What the chipmaker calls "MID phones" or Mobile Internet Device phones (see graphic below). Third, it could be a major market for Intel's upcoming solid state drives (SSDs).

Moorestown platform

Moorestown platform

(Credit: Intel)

MID phones will have other goodies too. Like high-speed WiMax broadband wireless (if, indeed, a widespread infrastructure is in place by then). With Moorestown, Intel is also targeting 10 times lower power consumption (at idle) than the 2008 "Menlow" Mobile Internet Device design. Which, theoretically, means much better battery life.

Moorestown targets "very large" phone market

Moorestown targets "very large" phone market

(Credit: Intel Corp.)

The flip side to all of this is that Intel is currently not a player in mobile phone processors. And its largest competitor, AMD, is ahead here. AMD's Imageon line of chips--inherited from ATI--are currently used in over 50 mobile phones and devices from companies like Motorola, LG, Panasonic, and Samsung. And AMD offers graphics technology to Freescale Semiconductor, Qualcomm, and STMicroelectronics, among others.

Last month, AMD disclosed the Imageon A250 applications processor for video recording/playback and photo imaging, among other applications. The chipmaker also revealed the Imageon D160 mobile TV solution. AMD also offers Z460 3D graphics that tap into the same patented AMD Unified Shader Architecture that provides a graphics platform for the Microsoft Xbox 360 video game system.

Originally posted at Nanotech: The Circuits Blog
Brooke Crothers has served as an editor at large at CNET News, an editor at Dow Jones' Asian Wall Street Journal Weekly, and a senior editor at InfoWorld. His CNET blog covers chip technology and computer systems, and how they define the computing experience. He also contributes to The New York Times' Bits and Technology sections. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure. Follow Brooke on Twitter @mbrookec.
Recent posts from Crave
Panasonic updates 3-chip camcorders
Nissan Juke set to debut in New York
preGAME 02: Heavy Rain
On Call: When will we see a new iPhone?
Intel taps student's robot for processor demo
What would you pay for an e-book?
Audio-Technica headphones offer noise cancellation and affordable sound
LG SL80 series LCD TV puts style first
advertisement

About Crave

The name says it all. Crave is our blog about gorgeous gadgets and other crushworthy stuff. If you would like to contact Crave with a tip or comment, please write to: crave@cnet.com

Add this feed to your online news reader

Crave topics

Google's social side aims for some Buzz

Facebook and Twitter are the darlings of the social-media world, not Google--which hopes to change that with Buzz, betting it can organize your online social life.

Watching the birth of a gaming start-up

Stewart Butterfield and his friends are back at it with a new company. CNET's Daniel Terdiman was given exclusive, behind-the-scenes access as they built it from scratch.