AMD reveals plans to enter tablet market

By Kristin Bent on Feb 9, 2012 8:24 AM
Filed under Hardware

Ultra-low APU to launch this year.

At its annual Financial Analyst Day last week, chip maker AMD set its product development course for the next two years and revealed its plans for low-power servers, new system-on-a-chip products, and a hope of moving all desktop and notebook processors to 28-nm architectures.

But lurking somewhat in the background was AMD's two-year plan for its long-awaited entry into the tablet market, which has been a point of concern for the struggling chip maker.

Former CEO Dirk Meyer unexpectedly resigned in early 2011 amid pressure from the company's board of directors, which felt the chip maker wasn't competitive enough in key market segments. One of those segments was, of course, tablet devices. (Meyer was eventually replaced last summer by former Lenovo President Rory Read.)

AMD said it plans to make its debut in the tablet space this year with the launch of an ultra-low power APU (accelerated processing unit) dubbed Hondo and, as previously announced, will also introduce its new Trinity APUs designed for ultra-thin laptops. 

Temash, the next ultra low-power APU on AMD’s roadmap set to launch in 2013, will still run at about three or four watts. This means it will still be limited to the same thicker or convertible tablet form factors as its predecessor Hondo. It also means the market will not see an AMD APU running at two watts or less until 2014.

In other words, the chip maker’s presence in true tablets as thin as an iPad, which is approximately .35 inches thick, won’t become a reality for another two years.

AMD's GPU Heritage Provides A Boost

Lisa Su, senior vice president and general manager of AMD's global business units, is confident that AMD can hit that two-watt mark over the next two years.

"From a growth standpoint, it's clear that ultra-thins and tablets will be two of the biggest growth vectors in the mobile space, and we're going to go after that with a vengeance,” Su said at the financial analyst event. "What we see there is taking all of the low-power techniques that we know about, we can absolutely get x86 to less than 2 watts."

Introducing a two watt APU in 2014 will put AMD nearly two years behind Intel’s Atom "Medfield" mobile processor and even further behind ARM’s low-power architectures found in iPad’s today. But Sergis Mushell, principal analyst for market researcher Gartner, told CRN that AMD still stands a fighting chance in the tablet market, and not necessarily because of its CPU technology.

Even if AMD chips don't reach that two watt target until 2014, Mushell said, the company’s long-standing GPU product line may ultimately give it a leg up against Intel. As more and more tablet computing happens at the cloud level, rather than the device level, graphics and presentation – rather than computational performance – will become a larger focus for tablet manufacturers.

Mushell noted that AMD could potentially follow the same model leveraged by Nvidia, another chip maker with a strong GPU heritage. Nvidia relies on ARM architectures to hit the computing and low-power benchmarks of its mobile Tegra chips, but what has really fueled the chips’ success is Nvidia’s graphics. AMD could take this same approach.

"It’s almost the same strategy, if you think about it, that Nvidia took," Mushell said. "Nvidia had the GPU heritage and then they licensed ARM and went into mobile devices, so it’s not a far stretch."

AMD openings its doors to third-party IP partners like ARM will most likely be a must for the company, Mushell told CRN. AMD also needs to drive its chip geometry down which may or may not be capable with its current foundry business GlobalFoundries. "This [low-power initiative] will drive AMD toward partnerships beyond what they have today," he said.

This article originally appeared at crn.com

 
Follow us on Facebook and Twitter
 

Copyright © 2011 United Business Media LLC. All rights reserved.

AMD reveals plans to enter tablet market
 
 
 
 
 
Top Stories
Major network outage at Anittel
Business customers disconnected most of yesterday.
 
Huawei knocks local revenue out of the park
Still bathing in poor light security-wise.
 
Sophos focus on channel education
Karen Delaney is the new channel director.
 
Sign up to receive CRN email bulletins
   FOLLOW US...
Latest Comments
Polls
Is your business doing as well now as it was at this time last year?


   |   View results
Yes
  33%
 
No
  52%
 
The same
  15%
TOTAL VOTES: 397

Vote now
CRN Magazine

Issue: 315 | May 2013

CRN Magazine looks in-depth at the emerging issues and developments for the channel, and provides insight, analysis and strategic information to help resellers better run their businesses.