Intel Breakthrough Might Finally Get It Into Smartphone Chips in a Big Way

In a classic example of how the right pure technology can open competitive doors, Intel (INTC) announced its new 3D, super-small chip technology. It's an impressive technical achievement that could give the chip giant the advantage it needs for greater success in mobile markets.

Not that Intel earnings have done badly. On the contrary, the company continues to outperform expectations. (You'd think that analysts would start to add the Intel Fudge Factor, assuming that they're being stonewalled.)

Simon says, don't move
However, Intel's business-as-usual story is one that would eventually have an unhappy ending. Consumers are changing their habits and quickly taking to smartphones and tablets. As a result, PC sales continue to slow, which explains the hammering of Microsoft's Windows client business. Although PCs and servers aren't Intel's only businesses, they are the big ones.

Reduce the number of PCs that sell and you reduce Intel's income. Intel has been behind in mobile as smartphones and tablets increasingly turn to the company's competitors for chips. ARM architecture has become a popular choice.

However, Intel is tops in sophistication of semiconductor manufacturing. The industry has constantly sought to reduce chip size (called a geometry) to pack more transistors in a single device. That trend led to the famous observation of increasing computer power and falling price called Moore's Law -- named for Intel co-founder Gordon Moore.

Let's get small

Chip companies push to smaller geometries for a number of reasons:

  • The smaller the chip, the more devices you can get from a single silicon wafer, which makes the manufacturing process more economically efficient.
  • The smaller the geometry, the more capabilities you can build in, which creates new products that command a premium price.
  • Consumer electronics manufacturers must constantly bring more features to their customers. That requires chips that can do more.
  • Greater integration on chips helps drive down costs of electronics goods, and so manufacturers make more money.
Various issues make it difficult to continue shrinking semiconductor geometries using the same approaches that companies relied on for years. Today, Intel announced a significant breakthrough. The company will move to a 22 nanometer manufacturing process, which will bring a 37 percent computing power increase over its current 32 nanometer process.

Intel will achieve this with a 3D transistor layout, rather than the single layer approach that everyone else uses. Although the industry has discussed the possibility of 3D architectures for decades, actually achieving this in a CPU could keep the company at the head of the pack for years.

Smaller chips with greater integrated functions and lower power consumption is exactly what the mobile industry craves, and Intel says that it will get performance and power consumption improvements greater than ever before. This could give Intel a real mobile boost. It put into context rumors that Intel might provide contract manufacturing of processors for Apple (AAPL). Intel has put itself back on the mobile map, and will likely give executives at ARM, AMD, Samsung, and other chip manufacturers some sleepless nights.

Related:

  • Intel Earnings: And Now the Bad News -- IT Buying Has Slowed
  • Intel's -- and the Entire Tech Industry's -- Big Competitor: China
  • Intel, Nvidia, and AMD: the End of the Semiconductor World as We Know It
  • Microsoft Jilts Intel at the Smartphone Altar
  • Intel Runs To Catch the Last Train to Mobile
Image: Intel Erik Sherman

Erik Sherman is a widely published writer and editor who also does select ghosting and corporate work. The views expressed in this column belong to Sherman and do not represent the views of CBS Interactive. Follow him on Twitter at @ErikSherman or on Facebook.

Twitter Facebook

Disclaimer: The copyright of this article belongs to the original author. Reposting this article is solely for the purpose of information dissemination and does not constitute any investment advice. If there is any infringement, please contact us immediately. We will make corrections or deletions as necessary. Thank you.