Intel sees $10 bn mobile web chip market
Chipmaker Intel will start production of its new "Menlow" chip platform, specially designed for Web browsing on mobile phones and other mobile Internet devices, in the next 90 days, it said on Wednesday.
Anand Chandrasekher, head of Intel's Ultra Mobility Group, said the Menlow chip would improve consumers' experience of the mobile Internet by providing a single platform for software developers.
The aim is to make Web-browsing on a mobile phone similar to that on a computer, and do away with the frustrating and common experience of slow or non-functioning links and downloads. ���You cannot get the best Internet experience on a Blackberry or even an iPhone. The technology hasn't been there,��� Chandrasekher told Reuters in an interview at the Mobile World Congress wireless fair in Barcelona.
���At the moment, for each device developers want the mobile internet to run on ��� Blackberry, Motorola, HTC ��� they need another port.���
He added: ���Apple has done a brilliant engineering job to get around some of the shortcomings of the hardware.��� He declined to say whether Apple, which is an Intel customer, planned to use Menlow in future versions of its iPhone.
Chandrasekher said he saw the addressable market for chip platforms such as Menlow reaching $10 billion by 2011. Intel, the world's biggest semiconductor company, has only one serious rival AMD.
Intel will build its Menlow chips using its most advanced, 45-nanometre technology that it deploys at five plants around the world, Chandrasekher said.
The Economic Times Business News App for the Latest News in Business, Sensex, Stock Market Updates & More.
The Economic Times News App for Quarterly Results, Latest News in ITR, Business, Share Market, Live Sensex News & More.