Silvermont will be the first new architecture for the low-power Atom chip
platform, which is aimed at everything from smartphones to microservers.
Intel, as it prepares to unveil its next-generation Core “Haswell” chip for
tablets and notebooks in early June, is reportedly preparing to outline the new
architecture that will be the underpinning of upcoming of low-power Atom chips
that will begin appearing in devices later this year.
Intel officials are expected to talk about the “Silvermont” architecture at
an event at the company’s Santa Clara, Calif., headquarters May 6. Silvermont
represents the first new architecture for the Atom platform since it was
introduced in 2008 and targeted at the now passé netbook.
Since that time, Intel executives have rapidly expanded Atom’s reach,
making it the platform for not only many of its tablet plans and smartphones,
but also for embedded devices and even low-power microservers. Silvermont will
be the next-generation architecture for upcoming chips like the 22-nanometer
“Bay Trail” for tablets and other devices running both Microsoft’s Windows 8 and
Google’s Android operating systems, and for “Merrifield,” which will go into
smartphones.
It also will be the architecture for “Avoton,” which will succeed
“Centerton” in microservers such as Hewlett-Packard’s Project Moonshot
systems.
Silvermont is expected to bring greater performance and lower power to the
Bay Trail chips, which Intel officials are hoping will help the vendor make
inroads into a tablet market where most of the devices currently run on
ARM-designed chips made by the likes of Qualcomm, Samsung and Nvidia. The chips,
which will include higher end Intel graphics capabilities, also could be a boon
for Windows 8 tablets, which still lag far behind those devices running Android
and Apple’s iOS.
Analysts have been critical of the performance of ARM-based tablets running
Microsoft’s Windows RT OS.
Intel officials have said tablets, hybrids and convertible devices powered
by the quad-core Bay Trail system-on-a-chips (SoCs) will appear in before the
holiday shopping season and help drive down tablet prices to as low as $200.
Smartphones powered by Merrifield are expected to hit the market early next
year.
Analysts at Strategy Analytics said in an April 25 report that of the 40.6
million tablets shipped in the first quarter, 48 ran iOS, while 43 percent ran
Android. Windows held a 7.5 percent market share. The 40.6 million tablets
shipped represented a 117 percent increase over the 18.7 million shipped during
the same period in 2012.
Though Microsoft saw a 7.5 percent market share, it was hindered by limited
distribution, a shortage of top-tier apps and confusion in the market, according
to Strategy Analytics.
Not all analysts saw that number as a bad sign for either Microsoft or
Intel. Ross Seymore, research analyst with Deutsche Bank, said in a research
note April 26 that Windows 8 “did surprisingly well” considering it had no
market share a year earlier.
Seymore also noted that Intel powered more than 90 percent of all the
Windows-based tablets, and that its chip strategy has the company poised to grow
its market share against ARM. He said that Intel’s current “Cover Trail” SoCs
are helping drive tablet prices to as low as $449, and that Bay Trail will help
lower prices even more. The chips “offer comparable performance and power
efficiency” as the ARM chips and give OEMs a solid alternative to ARM SoCs,
Seymore said.
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