Minggu, 28 April 2019

Report: Apple Poached Intel's Smartphone 5G Modem Lead Before Resolving Battle With Qualcomm - Gizmodo

Intel signage advertising 5G technology at CES 2018 in Las Vegas, January 2018.
Photo: David Becker (Getty Images)

Apple poached Intel’s lead developer for 5G phone modems, Umashankar Thyagarajan, in February—just weeks before it buried the hatchet with rival chip supplier Qualcomm this April, according to a report in the Telegraph on Sunday.

The hire apparently wasn’t a closely held secret (Thyagarajan now lists an “Architecture” job at Apple on his LinkedIn page). But it was a major victory for Apple, which has long been rumored to be mulling a shift into producing its own chips in-house.

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Embroiled in a bitter patent royalty/antitrust dispute with Qualcomm, Apple had leaned much more heavily on Intel, using the latter company as its exclusive supplier for the iPhone XS, XS Max, and XR. However, not long after Thyagarajan left for Apple, the tech giant resolved its battle with Qualcomm, agreeing to terms including a payment from Apple to Qualcomm, a six-year licensing deal, and a chip supply agreement. That left Intel’s 5G chip project without a main customer—and just hours later, Intel announced it was abandoning its 5G mobile ambitions entirely.

The Telegraph wrote that internal emails show Thyagarajan was an important player in Intel’s iPhone XS and XR projects, and his switch to team Apple was seen as a big loss:

Mr Thyagarajan’s departure is understood to have been a setback to Intel’s efforts, forcing the company to reshuffle the 5G project. Shortly afterwards, Intel said it would not be able to release a 5G smartphone chip until 2020, more than a year after Qualcomm.

According to an email sent to Intel staff, written by executives Messay Amerga and Abhay Joshi, Mr Thyagarajan had “played a key role” in the Intel chip that featured in last year’s iPhones and he had been the project engineer on developing its 5G chip, known as XMM 8160.

Mr Thyagarajan’s appointment will add to rumours that Apple is planning to make its own smartphone modem instead of buying them from partners.

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The Telegraph also noted that rumors have circulated Apple is planning to buy up the rest of Intel’s chip modem business entirely.

A Wall Street Journal report on Friday quoted sources as saying that Intel was still considering selling off parts of its modem chip business to “Apple or another acquirer,” but that talks had cooled around the time of the Apple-Qualcomm settlement. Moor Insights & Strategy principal Patrick Moorhead told the paper Intel’s modem chip business has been costing it around $1 billion annually and its “value goes down with every second” that passes without a sale, though potential other buyers include Broadcom, ON Semiconductor Inc., Samsung, or Chinese company Unisoc Communications Inc.

Fast Company reported in early April, before the settlement, that a source said Apple “has a team of between 1000 and 1200 engineers working on the modem chips for future iPhones” in San Diego lured from both Intel and Qualcomm. However, that report also noted while it is “possible that future iPhone modem chips could be designed at that facility by Apple employees, and then fabricated by TSMC or Samsung,” that will likely only happen years in the future. Fast Company’s source said they believed the company’s best choice was to return to Qualcomm, which does seem to be what happened—albeit not before Apple brought on board some of Intel’s talent.

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[The Telegraph]

 

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https://gizmodo.com/report-apple-poached-intels-smartphone-5g-modem-lead-b-1834367075

2019-04-28 22:30:00Z
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Epic pulled the Siphon from 'Fortnite' after it frustrated most players - Engadget

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Epic Games

Epic has to walk a fine line between courting the Fortnite esports crowd and satisfying the bulk of its audience, and that's particularly apparent today. The developer has explained that it pulled the Siphon (a feature that gave health and shields after kills) from core modes when "players at large" were quickly turned off by it. It was meant to keep Pop-Up Cup tournaments exciting by rewarding aggressive play, but it also left all but the top 10 percent of players feeling disenfranchised. The 90 percent of less proficient players became "more frustrated and played less," Epic said.

Siphon is still around in the Arena mode.

The company also explained other choices, such as its decision against including a field-of-view slider. A wide field of view could give some players an unfair advantage, Epic said. It also acknowledged that the weekly online tournament pacing meant that it couldn't stabilize gameplay for every online qualifying match ahead of the Fortnite World Cup Finals, but that it had fixed a number of bugs high-skill players were likely to encounter. You shouldn't deal with "ghost shots," for example.

This might not bring you back if you felt burnt by Epic's choices. It at least offers a rationale, though, and suggests that the developer might be more careful about gameplay tweaks that might favor competitive players over the just-for-fun audience. Not that Epic has much choice. When Fortnite has over 250 million players, a significant imbalance risks alienating millions of people.

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https://www.engadget.com/2019/04/28/epic-explains-fortnite-competitive-changes/

2019-04-28 21:31:57Z
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Epic pulled the Siphon from 'Fortnite' after it frustrated most players - Engadget

Sponsored Links

Epic Games

Epic has to walk a fine line between courting the Fortnite esports crowd and satisfying the bulk of its audience, and that's particularly apparent today. The developer has explained that it pulled the Siphon (a feature that gave health and shields after kills) from core modes when "players at large" were quickly turned off by it. It was meant to keep Pop-Up Cup tournaments exciting by rewarding aggressive play, but it also left all but the top 10 percent of players feeling disenfranchised. The 90 percent of less proficient players became "more frustrated and played less," Epic said.

Siphon is still around in the Arena mode.

The company also explained other choices, such as its decision against including a field-of-view slider. A wide field of view could give some players an unfair advantage, Epic said. It also acknowledged that the weekly online tournament pacing meant that it couldn't stabilize gameplay for every online qualifying match ahead of the Fortnite World Cup Finals, but that it had fixed a number of bugs high-skill players were likely to encounter. You shouldn't deal with "ghost shots," for example.

This might not bring you back if you felt burnt by Epic's choices. It at least offers a rationale, though, and suggests that the developer might be more careful about gameplay tweaks that might favor competitive players over the just-for-fun audience. Not that Epic has much choice. When Fortnite has over 250 million players, a significant imbalance risks alienating millions of people.

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https://www.engadget.com/2019/04/28/epic-explains-fortnite-competitive-changes/

2019-04-28 21:31:31Z
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Apple poached Intel's 5G leader weeks ahead of Qualcomm truce - Engadget

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Evan Rodgers/Engadget

Intel's decision to bail on 5G modems may have gone hand-in-hand with Apple's truce with Qualcomm, but it's now clear there were hints of a shift weeks earlier. The Telegraph has learned that Apple poached Intel's 5G phone modem leader, Umashankar Thyagarajan, in February. While the departure itself wasn't a complete secret (Thyagarajan's LinkedIn profile confirms the switch), the news outlet claims to have email showing that the ex-director was the project engineer for the XMM 8160 chip at the heart of Intel's plans. He also "played a key role" creating the Intel modems used in the iPhone XS and XR.

Neither Apple nor Intel has commented on the report. It's also not clear exactly what Thyagarajan is doing in his new role (he describes it solely as "Architecture" in his LinkedIn bio), although wireless chipset design is the most likely explanation given his background.

Apple hasn't been shy about its intentions to make its own cellular chipsets. The company has been recruiting relevant talent for a while, and went so far as to expand its presence in San Diego in a move interpreted as an attempt to recruit Qualcomm staff. However, Thyagarajan's hire is a particularly huge coup for Apple -- it shows the company is determined to snap up top-level talent as it starts on cellular hardware, including people from its erstwhile partners.

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https://www.engadget.com/2019/04/28/apple-poached-intel-5g-leader/

2019-04-28 19:58:06Z
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Apple poached Intel's 5G leader weeks ahead of Qualcomm truce - Engadget

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Evan Rodgers/Engadget

Intel's decision to bail on 5G modems may have gone hand-in-hand with Apple's truce with Qualcomm, but it's now clear there were hints of a shift weeks earlier. The Telegraph has learned that Apple poached Intel's 5G phone modem leader, Umashankar Thyagarajan, in February. While the departure itself wasn't a complete secret (Thyagarajan's LinkedIn profile confirms the switch), the news outlet claims to have email showing that the ex-director was the project engineer for the XMM 8160 chip at the heart of Intel's plans. He also "played a key role" creating the Intel modems used in the iPhone XS and XR.

Neither Apple nor Intel has commented on the report. It's also not clear exactly what Thyagarajan is doing in his new role (he describes it solely as "Architecture" in his LinkedIn bio), although wireless chipset design is the most likely explanation given his background.

Apple hasn't been shy about its intentions to make its own cellular chipsets. The company has been recruiting relevant talent for a while, and went so far as to expand its presence in San Diego in a move interpreted as an attempt to recruit Qualcomm staff. However, Thyagarajan's hire is a particularly huge coup for Apple -- it shows the company is determined to snap up top-level talent as it starts on cellular hardware, including people from its erstwhile partners.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.engadget.com/2019/04/28/apple-poached-intel-5g-leader/

2019-04-28 19:58:02Z
52780278998363

After Math: No Spoilers! - Engadget

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FEDERICO PARRA via Getty Images

As the moviegoing public anxiously awaited this weekend's release of Avengers: Endgame, the rest of the tech world moved ahead as if nobody had been snapped. Here are some of the week's top headlines you may have missed while scouring Fandango for open Endgame seats.

1065837100

Google bans developer with half a billion app downloads from Play Store

DO Global was a big name in Android app development before this week. Now the company is the poster child of what happens when you get caught gaming the system. Google discovered that the company was committing ad fraud and has already removed half of the developer's hundred-plus apps from the Play Store.

asdf

Amazon Prime shipping could shrink to just one-day

Amazon is 6-minute abs-ing itself. The online retail behemoth announced during this week's Q1 earning call that it will be cutting its 2-day delivery times for Prime members in half. The news has already sent Target and Walmart stocks skidding.

E3 EXPO 2018

Sony says its new PlayStation is more than a year away

If you were hoping to catch a glimpse of the upcoming PS 5 at the 2019 E3 convention, I've got some bad news. Not only is the next-gen console at least 12 months away from being ready, Sony's not even showing up to this year's premiere gaming trade show.

asdf

Sinemia's theater subscription shuts down in the US

You won't have to worry about your friends spoiling Endgame by using the movie subscription service Sinema to sneak into the opening night premieres -- namely because Sinema is kaput. It cancelled its North American operations earlier this week.

asdf

Imogen Heap's musical gloves are finally available to everyone

Um, hooray?

asdf

There's a Thanos-themed Easter egg hiding in Google Search

This is about as much of a spoiler you'll get out of us before next Monday. Google got in on the Avengers hype this week with a bejewelled gauntlet of an easter egg in its search results. Finding it should be a snap.

asdf

Cryptocurrency exchange accused of covering up $850 million loss

Cryptocurrency? More like Crypt-uh-oh-currency. Thanks I'll be here all week, be sure to tip your waiter.

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https://www.engadget.com/2019/04/28/after-math-no-spoilers/

2019-04-28 16:19:32Z
CAIiELJb6g3QOFi05ylkDaX758IqFwgEKg8IACoHCAowwOjjAjDp3xsw9bAl

After Math: No Spoilers! - Engadget

Sponsored Links

FEDERICO PARRA via Getty Images

As the moviegoing public anxiously awaited this weekend's release of Avengers: Endgame, the rest of the tech world moved ahead as if nobody had been snapped. Here are some of the week's top headlines you may have missed while scouring Fandango for open Endgame seats.

1065837100

Google bans developer with half a billion app downloads from Play Store

DO Global was a big name in Android app development before this week. Now the company is the poster child of what happens when you get caught gaming the system. Google discovered that the company was committing ad fraud and has already removed half of the developer's hundred-plus apps from the Play Store.

asdf

Amazon Prime shipping could shrink to just one-day

Amazon is 6-minute abs-ing itself. The online retail behemoth announced during this week's Q1 earning call that it will be cutting its 2-day delivery times for Prime members in half. The news has already sent Target and Walmart stocks skidding.

E3 EXPO 2018

Sony says its new PlayStation is more than a year away

If you were hoping to catch a glimpse of the upcoming PS 5 at the 2019 E3 convention, I've got some bad news. Not only is the next-gen console at least 12 months away from being ready, Sony's not even showing up to this year's premiere gaming trade show.

asdf

Sinemia's theater subscription shuts down in the US

You won't have to worry about your friends spoiling Endgame by using the movie subscription service Sinema to sneak into the opening night premieres -- namely because Sinema is kaput. It cancelled its North American operations earlier this week.

asdf

Imogen Heap's musical gloves are finally available to everyone

Um, hooray?

asdf

There's a Thanos-themed Easter egg hiding in Google Search

This is about as much of a spoiler you'll get out of us before next Monday. Google got in on the Avengers hype this week with a bejewelled gauntlet of an easter egg in its search results. Finding it should be a snap.

asdf

Cryptocurrency exchange accused of covering up $850 million loss

Cryptocurrency? More like Crypt-uh-oh-currency. Thanks I'll be here all week, be sure to tip your waiter.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.engadget.com/2019/04/28/after-math-no-spoilers/

2019-04-28 15:58:57Z
CAIiELJb6g3QOFi05ylkDaX758IqFwgEKg8IACoHCAowwOjjAjDp3xsw9bAl