East Bay Times

Intel losing grip as top chipmaker

Amazon, Apple powering shift from the company’s products

- Sy Eon Clark

SAN FRANCISCO » For close to a decade, supporters of the chip technology that powers mobile phones vowed to shake up the market for computers. For the most part, they made little headway.

Now that finally seems to be changing, in a potential power shift over the direction of the computer industry.

The change is being driven by Apple and Amazon, two tech behemoths that are cutting their dependence on the Intel chip technology that has long controlled most personal computers and larger server systems. Instead, the companies are increasing­ly leaning on their own homegrown chips that were designed using technology that Arm, the British company, licenses for smartphone­s and other consumer products.

Apple fired a salvo last month when it introduced new models of Mac computers that for

the first time used its own Armbased chips. In June, Amazon’s cloud computing business started marketing a new computing service based on its own Arm-based chips, telling customers the service was both faster and cheaper by one-fifth than its Intel-based offerings.

On Tuesday, Amazon unveiled a second computing service for businesses based on those same chips. It also discussed gains made by users of the first service that was introduced in June, such as Snap, maker of the Snapchat messaging app. Amazon

added that Twitter plans to begin using the technology as part of a broadened relationsh­ip between the companies.

“The larger the customer, the more excited they are,” said Peter DeSantis, who oversees computing infrastruc­ture for Amazon Web Services.

The actions by Apple and Amazon are causing ripple effects across the $ 400 billion semiconduc­tor industry. Their moves suggest that key decisions in chips may increasing­ly shift from silicon suppliers, where the power had long resided, to chip users with the resources to make their own components. For computer users, the moves may ultimately result in more technology choices, snappier computing speeds and lower costs.

“Everyone’s like, wow, Apple’s totally in; Amazon and others are in,” said Keith Kressin, a senior vice president at Qualcomm, a large supplier of Arm-based chips. “This is going to happen for real.”

Intel became a dominant force in computing in the 1990s, emerging as the biggest supplier of processors for PCs and later exploiting its high-volume manufactur­ing to make lowerprice­d chips for servers. But the company did not make chips for smartphone­s, which became hugely popular starting in 2007.

Enter Arm. The 30-year- old company, which Nvidia recently agreed to buy from SoftBank for $40 billion, delivered chips that used less power than Intel processors. That difference — which meant that mobile phones might run all day on a battery charge, rather than just a few hours — attracted makers of chips for mobile phones, such as Qualcomm.

In the last decade, some backers of Arm technology also be

gan saying that such chips could be used beyond mobile phones. Companies such as Broadcom and Qualcomm started designing Arm-based chips for data centers to cut down on rising power bills for Intel processors. They later gave up the costly efforts, partly because customers demanded greater computing speed.

In PCs, Microsoft has also talked up Arm, with little success. While the software giant has worked with Qualcomm to market an Arm-based version of Windows and laptops that use the operating system, sales have been minimal, largely because of a lack of programs created for the laptops, market researcher­s said.

Then came Apple’s move. The company, which had previously designed Arm-based chips for phones and tablets, said in June that it would gradually shift

from the Intel processors it has used in its Mac computers since 2005. Apple said its first chip designed for the Mac, the M1, delivered twice the performanc­e of a comparable Intel chip while using a quarter of the power.

“Every Mac with M1 will be transforme­d into a completely different class of product,” Johny Srouji, Apple’s senior vice president of hardware technologi­es, said at last month’s online event to introduce the new Macs.

Intel said it should not be counted out. It continues producing faster versions of its x86 chips, and many customers don’t want to rewrite software that runs on them.

“Intel is building on more than 20 years of x86-based ecosystem work,” said Lisa Spelman, an Intel corporate vice president. “We ensure software compatibil­ity and high performanc­e, important requiremen­ts for both consumers and data center customers.”

Amazon also continues to expand its use of Intel chips for some jobs. It announced a plan

Tuesday to run Intel-powered Mac mini computers in its data centers to help programmer­s develop software for Apple systems without using Apple hardware.

But Arm is increasing­ly competitiv­e in computing, said Rene Haas, president of Arm’s main products group. He said Arm has made key changes to boost the computing performanc­e of each processor core, or the individual calculatin­g engines laid out on each piece of silicon.

Cloud-style computing chores also can better exploit lots of relatively simple cores and specialpur­pose circuitry, said Amazon’s DeSantis. Its Arm-based chip, called the Graviton2, has 64 such cores compared with up to 24 more powerful cores on Intel server chips, he said. That helps it perform computing tasks that are done simultaneo­usly, like serving up web pages to different people.

Ampere, a chip startup in Santa Clara, California, has developed an 80- core Arm server chip and expects to release a 128- core version next year.

Renée James, Ampere’s chief executive, said its customers and investors include software giant Oracle, which plans to offer a cloud computing service based on Ampere’s chips.

Arm “is real with Amazon,” James said. “Their competitor­s will follow suit.”

Gerard Williams III, chief executive of Nuvia, another startup promoting Arm- based chips, said Arm backers have also benefited as Intel has lost the lead in driving manufactur­ing innovation­s that make chips do more at a lower cost. Chip producers such as Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Co. and Samsung Electronic­s can now pack more functions on each slice of silicon, which means Arm chip designers that use them can achieve speed advantages.

The change is showing up in many forms of computing. In laptop computers, Gartner, the research firm, predicted that Apple’s new Macs and rivals’ responses would push Arm-based PCs to 13.5% of the market by 2024, up from 1.1% this year.

 ?? PAUL SAKUMA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES ?? Intel became a dominant force in computing in the 1990s, emerging as the biggest supplier of processors for PCs.
PAUL SAKUMA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES Intel became a dominant force in computing in the 1990s, emerging as the biggest supplier of processors for PCs.

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