Free Newsletter

QUICK POLL
  • Will the new cloudbook device be a success?
  • Yes
  • No
Advertize your telecoms job

Intel and Ericsson team on embedded HSPA

By CAROLINE GABRIEL

Published: 22 October, 2008

READ MORE: Ericsson | Intel | HSDPA

While Intel may dream of WiMAX being the only game in town for mobile broadband, in reality it has to accommodate multiple standards if it is to be a major play in the mobile market. An earlier attempt to work with Nokia on HSPA for notebooks foundered on various conflicts of interest, but now Intel is making a new attempt, this time in collaboration with Ericsson, which will provide HSPA elements for Intel's Moorestown processor for mobile internet devices (MIDs).

The deal extends Ericsson's business in HSPA chips from its current laptop base to the emerging category of MIDs. The Swedish giant's semiconductor unit is in the process of being put into a joint venture with STMicro, and the Intel alliance will be a valuable asset to that firm, strengthening its position in the embedded 3G+ sector, where Qualcomm is increasingly powerful.

At the Intel Developer Forum in Taiwan this week, Anand Chandrasekher, general manager of Intel's Ultra Mobility Group, showed off Moorestown, the successor to the current iteration of the Atom low power microprocessor for mobile products such as netbooks and, in future, smartphones. While Atom has mainly featured in compact, wireless optimized laptops - with third party 3G silicon - Moorestown will be more aggressive in the MID space, and now Intel will be able to offer makers of these devices a full set of chips through the Ericsson alliance. Intel will also work with Option and with some unnamed Taiwanese chipmakers in the same area.

Moorestown consists of a system on chip (SoC) design code named Lincroft, which integrates a 45nm microprocessor, graphics, memory controller and video encode/decode functionality onto a single chip, plus an I/O hub codenamed Langwell. This connects to wireless, storage and display components. Chandrasekher said that Intel is on track to reduce the Moorestown platform's idle power by more than 10 times compared to first generation Atoms. The platform will be released in late 2009 or early 2010 and will support various wireless technologies including 3G, WiMAX, Wi-Fi, GPS, Bluetooth and mobile TV.

For its part, Ericsson aims to take a lead in embedding HSPA in all kinds of mobile devices from MIDs to consumer electronics gadgets such as GPS navigators, gaming consoles and devices optimized for social networking. Johan Wibergh, head of Business Unit Networks, said that the company sees "great potential in embedding mobile broadband in MIDs, creating new markets in the industry". Ericsson provides HSPA chipsets in compact modules and a module will now be optimized for Moorestown and for the Moblin Linux system that Intel favors.

COMMENTS

Add Comment
No comments yet. Be the first to add a comment!
MARKET PLACE

    Digital Money: The Convergence of Contactless Card and Mobile Payments

    This report examines the emergence of digital money from the perspective of the convergence of card-based proximity payments to the...

    Cloudbooks: Market Analysis and Forecasts

    This report is based on interviews with device OEMs, retailers and resellers and provides a comprehensive analysis of the new cloudbook...
WHITE PAPERS

    Satellite Phones: Will Dual Mode Help the Phoenix Rise from the Ashes?

    Satellite phones have followed an arduous path since their much-hyped launch more than a decade ago. The hype was followed by an e...

    Mobile Widget Platform Market Analysis: Understanding the Business Case and ROI

    This white paper presents an analysis of the mobile widget platform market, as well as metrics supporting a mobile carrier?s busin...

POST COMMENT

You must be a registered user to post a comment. or
Username *
Email *
Comment *
Information on formatting options