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Video: Nightline’s report on life inside an iPad factory

Bill Weir dons a bunny suit and takes a camera into Foxconn’s Shenzhen facilities

Click for video

With Apple’s (AAPL) permission, Foxconn for the first time allowed a reporter and his camera crew into its famous Shenzhen, China, factory complex. The 17-minute report aired Tuesday night.

Apart from some details about the production processes (it takes 141 steps, mostly done by hand, to assemble an iPhone) there’s little news here that wasn’t in the reporter’s notebook Nightline co-host Bill Weir filed on Monday. But the segment is worth watching if only for his exclusive video of the endless production lines, the huge cafeterias, the crowded dorm rooms, the suicide nets, the stampede of job seekers and a glimpse of life in the villages where they come from.

Weir also accompanied the Fair Labor Association as it made an Apple-sponsored audit of the facility. “I expect them to put on a show for us,” FLA president Auret van Heerden told Weir. And indeed, AppleInsider Wednesday related the claims of a local labor group that Foxconn hid its underage employees before the auditors arrived.

ABC’s YouTube link is pasted above. The video is also available at Nightline’s website here.

Filed under: Apple 2.0

February 22 2012 | Posted in Tech Blog | Read More »

Nvidia throws down

The chipmaker is making a bigger play in cell phones — one that could spook competitors.

FORTUNE — The battle for the teeny-tiny chips that power cell phones is heating up. Santa Clara, Calif.-based chipmaker Nvidia just announced the ZTE Mimosa X, the first phone that runs on its Tegra 2 processor and an Nvidia-made modem chip (and quite possibly the first phone named after an alcoholic beverage).

Why is this significant? Up until now, Nvidia (NVDA) has focused on just one key mobile component — the applications processor — and left the connectivity component to Qualcomm (QCOM) and other mobile chip players. But last year Nvidia acquired modem chipset maker Icera, and it’s now bundling the chip-making technology it bought with its Tegra processor. That means the Mimosa X is the first phone almost entirely powered by Nvidia. It also means Qualcomm’s dominance (it owns 51% of the smartphone chip market) is under greater threat than before.

MORE: The iPhone is (still) saving the mobile industry

Of course, Nvidia and Qualcomm aren’t the only chipmakers vying for a piece of the increasing mobile pie. With more and more consumers turning to smartphones and tablets instead of PCs, Intel (INTC) is also (finally) making a big push for the mobile market. The world’s largest chipmaker has brought in new leadership to lead its mobile efforts and recently made its own acquisition in the connectivity space, shelling out $1.4 billion for Infineon’s mobile division in 2010. At the Consumer Electronics Show last January, Intel announced that its Medfield processor will power phones made by Motorola (MMI) and Lenovo, and the company is expected to unveil more details about its mobile strategy at next week’s Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. While this isn’t the first time Intel is attempting to crack the mobile market, initial reviews on Medfield have been good. What’s more, Intel has plenty of other tricks up its sleeve — after all, it is a manufacturing powerhouse with plenty of cash. It’s already made a handful of acquisitions that could help it bake location-based technology and security features—not to mention connectivity—into its mobile chipsets.

Mobile phone chips aren’t nearly as lucrative as PC processors. That’s why Intel is betting that selling a complete package with add-on features is the way to differentiate and drive profits. Apparently, that’s also what Nvidia is starting to do, though at a much smaller scale.

MORE: Intel’s (latest) mobile comeback

In a call with Fortune shortly after the company’s announcement, Nvidia’s CEO Jen-Hsun Huang said more phones powered by its applications and modem chips are on their way. The company should have plenty more news next week at Mobile World Congress—as will Intel, Qualcomm and every other company hoping to chip away at the fast-growing market for smartphone chips.

Filed under: Big Tech, Uncategorized

February 22 2012 | Posted in Tech Blog | Read More »

Apple and Proview trade blows in a Shanghai courtroom

In a fractious four-hour hearing, both sides were admonished by the judge

Proview’s i-Pad

The world’s most valuable company and a troubled Chinese electronics manufacturer that’s about to be delisted from the Hong Kong stock exchange unless it can come up with some cash squared off in a Shanghai courtroom Wednesday.

At stake: the trademark for Apple’s (AAPL) iPad, the most successful new electronics gadget since, well, the iPhone.

Apple claims it bought worldwide rights for the trademark three years ago for $55,000. Proview, which briefly partnered with National Semiconductor to market the i-Pad, a low-cost knock-off of Apple’s iMac, claims Apple slipped up and neglected to buy the rights from Shenzhen Proview, the company’s Chinese subsidiary.

“Apple has no right to sell iPads under that name,” the lawyer for Shenzhen Proview argued, according to an AP report.

Apple’s iPad 2

“Proview has no product, no markets, no customers and no suppliers. It has nothing,” the lawyer representing Apple countered, according to the Washington Post.

“Apple has huge sales in China. Its fans line up to buy Apple products. The ban, if executed, would not only hurt Apple sales but it would also hurt China’s national interest.”

Proview’s lawyer would have none of it:

“Whether people will go hungry because you can’t sell iPads in China is not the issue,” he said. “The court must rule according to the law. Do you absolutely have to sell the product? Can’t you sell it using a different name?”

More than 100 reporters packed the courtroom to watch the fractious exchange. After admonishing both sides to respect the rules of the court, the judge adjourned the hearing.

His decision may rest on the details of the 2009 transaction in which a British firm, secretly working for Apple, bought what it believed were all rights to the iPad trademark from Proview International Holdings’ Taiwanese subsidiary. Proview Shenzhen claims that the Chinese rights were not part of that deal.

A Hong Court ruled in Apple’s favor last summer, finding that Shenzhen Proview was trying to “take advantage” of the situation. In December, Proview won a judgement against Apple in a provincial Chinese court, resulting in iPads being removed from some retailers’ shelves. A hearing on Apple’s appeal is scheduled for Feb. 29.

Proview has said it is open to a settlement. Meanwhile, the Hejun Vanguard Group, a consulting company representing Proview’s creditors, says it is preparing to sue Apple in the U.S. for $2 billion.

“It’s all about the money,” reads an editorial in the English-language China Daily. “People are anxious to see whether Proview (Shenzhen), which has fallen on hard times, can force Apple to pay up for sloppy legal work establishing its trademark.”

Apple seems in no mood to settle. In a letter to Proview’s chairman delivered Monday, it claimed to have evidence that he personally authorized the sale of all rights, Taiwanese and Chinese. The letter threatened to sue him for defamation, which in China can be punishable by death.

Filed under: Apple 2.0

February 22 2012 | Posted in Tech Blog | Read More »

Comcast is no Netflix — not yet anyway

Xfinity Streampix’s thus-far-meager offerings are available only to subscribers of Comcast’s pay-TV services.

FORTUNE — Put “Comcast” and “streaming” together in a press release and predictably, reports will proliferate that the cable giant is taking on Netflix. It isn’t.

Not yet, anyway. Comcast’s (CMCSA) new streaming service, Xfinity Streampix, will be available to existing video customers only, though it’s possible — even likely — that the company is laying the groundwork for future direct competition with Netflix (NFLX), the current leader in streaming video, as well as with Amazon (AMZN), Hulu Plus and every other streamer that is now in, or will be entering, the market.

MORE: Amazon’s Prime and punishment

For now, the move seems aimed at retaining customers who might otherwise bolt for Netflix (NFLX), and to get at least some Comcast customers who already subscribe to Netflix to cancel that subscription. That might be seen as competition. But the service isn’t available even to Comcast’s own broadband-Internet subscribers unless they’re video customers as well. Netflix is available to anyone with a credit card and a device on which to watch streamed video. It also has a far larger catalog of offerings.

Subscribers to Comcast’s expensive Double Play and Triple Play bundled services will get free access to the Streampix. Subscribers to lower-end pay-TV services will be charged $4.99 a month to get streamed television shows and movies. Most of the so-far-meager offerings are from back catalogs — older episodes of The Office and 30 Rock, shows like Lost and Married With Children, and movies such as The Big Lebowski and When Harry Met Sally. The company says more programming will soon be available. Comcast struck deals for the service with Disney (DIS), NBC Universal, Sony Pictures (SNE), Warner Bros. (TWX) and Cookie Jar, a provider of children’s programming. Comcast owns NBC Universal.

MORE: No, Netflix doesn’t suddenly believe in DVDs again

The Wall Street Journal reported that “people familiar with the pacts” said the content deals include rights for Comcast to sell the service nationally to anyone. On the record, though, a Comcast executive told the Journal that the company has ”no intention to launch something out of our footprint,” but is merely making its current offerings more appealing. The service will be available on the Web, on Apple’s (AAPL) iPad, and via Comcast’s video-on-demand cable service. Future platforms might include Google’s (GOOG) Android and Microsoft’s (MSFT) Xbox 360 gaming console.

Filed under: Uncategorized

February 22 2012 | Posted in Tech Blog | Read More »

The iPhone is (still) saving the mobile industry

Apple’s iPhone almost singlehandedly saved AT&T and Sprint. But it come at a steep price, one that the mobile carriers will be paying for years.

By Kevin Kelleher, contributor

apple-iphoneFORTUNE – The iPhone has been, by many measures, one of the most successful products in business history. Nearly 200 million iPhones have been sold in four and a half years, 37 million of them in the last three months of 2011. Apple’s market cap has soared from $104 billion in June 2007, when the first iPhone was sold, to $480 billion today.

No doubt, the iPhone is a revenue machine. Last quarter, it generated $24.4 billion in revenue for Apple (AAPL), greater than the $20.9 billion Microsoft (MSFT) made in all of its various businesses. It is, to say the least, obscenely profitable: iPhones make up 75% of the profits of cell-phone makers, despite being only 9% of all units shipped.

Less visible in such soaring statistics, is the impact on the mobile carriers. Even with the heavy subsidies phone companies must pay to Apple and some five years after its introduction, the iPhone may well be the best thing going for the mobile industry.

Even though AT&T (T) has lost its exclusive status with the iPhone, it’s likely to keep fighting for iPhone customers. According to Hudson Square Research, iPhone users have a net present value — a measure of cash flows over a product’s lifetime — that is twice as high as subscribers using the old, clamshell feature phones.

MORE: Apple just doubled its addressable market in China

The smartphone, as conceived by Apple, seems designed to generate carrier fees. Unlike the standard feature phones, which are primarily used for phone calls and text messages, iPhone users also pay for wireless data connections. AT&T has raised data fees and introduced costlier tiers for heavy users. And many users find they are making fewer phone calls, even though their monthly phone rates are remaining steady.

That’s all true for other smartphones too, of course. But more than any other device, the iPhone is responsible for inspiring all those categories of fees — voice, texting, data — as well as the class system of data usage. By influencing the look and operability of other Google (GOOG) Android and other smartphones, the iPhone had a broader impact on the wireless industry as a whole. “We believe that without the iPhone, the wireless industry would look very different today — smartphones would still be a niche product, average revenue per user would be about $15 lower, and the service would be mostly commoditized,” Hudson Square analyst Todd Rethemeier recently wrote.

For Sprint (S), which began selling the iPhone 4S last fall, the iPhone has been something close to a lifeline. In the fourth quarter of 2011, the iPhone helped Sprint see a net gain of 161,000 subscribers, well below AT&T’s net gain of 717,000 and Verizon’s 1.2 million but the first quarter of net gains in a year. Sprint said 40% of customers buying iPhones were new, perhaps drawn by its unlimited data plans.

Sprint’s CEO Dan Hesse has been vocal about the importance of having an iPhone among the company’s smartphone offerings. “Having the ability to sell the iPhone removes the number one reason people had churned in recent years,” Christopher Larsen, a Piper Jaffray analyst wrote after a meeting with Hesse. “It is also important to have for the customers who remained at Sprint knowing that the carrier would one day carry the device.”

MORE: Intel’s (latest) mobile comeback

But there’s a catch. AT&T is down 26% from the day it started selling the iPhone. Sprint is down a depressing 52% since it began selling the iPhone. And Verizon (VZ), (buttressing the adage that single-letter tickers are bad luck for stocks these days) is up 8% since it began selling iPhones a year ago.

And herein lies the double-edged sword of the iPhone for carriers. Apple earns its fat profit margin largely because people love the iPhone, but also because of the subsidies it wrings from carriers — by some estimates 40% higher than those of other smartphones. And all carriers, Verizon, Sprint and AT&T, are investing heavily in LTE networks to accommodate the next generation of high-bandwidth smartphones.

So yes, analysts are bullish on Sprint because it’s stemming the flow of subscribers who crave an iPhone. But they are also concerned that subsidies and other expenses of network investments will easily cost Sprint $15 billion over the next four years. And yet Sprint doesn’t have any choice but to spend that money. Because it could die without the iPhone.

It’s not just Sprint who lives by that double-edged sword. A report this week from Morgan Stanley said AT&T’s profit margins fell to 28.7% from 37.6% a year earlier, thanks largely to the subsidies it must pay to Apple for selling millions of iPhone 4S’s. And even Verizon’s margins fell to 42.2% in the most recent quarter from 47.5% in the same period.

MORE: Nielsen: 66% of Americans ages 24-35 own a smartphone

The costs of subsidies and LTE networks are so weighing on AT&T that it’s looking to shed off its non-core assets, like wired lines in rural areas. They are still profitable, but will eat into profit margins as each quarter passes.

You might ask why Verizon’s profit margin is so much higher than AT&T’s (let alone Sprint’s, which posted an operating and net loss last quarter). That’s because the subsidies that Verizon has negotiated with Android device makers gives it between $100 an $200 more per device than the iPhone does.

But even Verizon knows it can’t thrive without the iPhone. Thanks to Google and Samsung and Research-in-Motion (RIMM), there are some great alternatives to the iPhone. But buying them doesn’t save you any money. Buy an iPhone on Verizon and your money goes to Apple. Buy an Android phone, it goes to Verizon.

And judging from the reception of the iPhone 4S, this smartphone is the consumer’s choice for now. If you’re a mobile carrier, you have to sell it. If you do, the iPhone will be your ticket to the future. But it’s going to cost you.

Filed under: Big Tech, Contributors

February 22 2012 | Posted in Tech Blog | Read More »

Today in Tech: Comcast unveils Netflix competitor

Fortune’s curated selection of tech stories from the last 24 hours. Sign up to get the round-up delivered to you each and every day.

* The Verge gives at a long look at Research in Motion’s rise and decline: how it was built and how former co-CEOs Mike Lazaridis and Jim Balsillie lost their way. Also, the company’s ailing BlackBerry PlayBook tablet received a software update that finally brought native apps to access email, calendar, address book and BlackBerry Messenger functions. (The Verge and CNNMoney)

* Dell’s fiscal fourth quarter earnings came in below analyst predictions: an 18% drop in net income to $764 million on revenues of $16 billion. (The New York Times)

* Comcast (CMCSA) is working on a new subscription video-on-demand competitor, named “Streampix,”  intended to go up against Netflix (NFLX). But the streaming service will only be available to those who also subscribe to Comcast cable. (Variety)

* Netflix inked a deal with The Weinstein Company. Translation: film titles like The Artist, Sarah’s Key, and The Intouchables, are coming to Netflix Instant. (Techcrunch)

* Tech entrepreneurs are getting younger and younger. Venture capitalists like Andreessen Horowitz now say they’re funding startups with 18 or 19-year-old founders. (Reuters)

* According to the analytics firm Distimo, many app makers are apparently making more money from their apps in Amazon’s Appstore than they are via Google’s Android Market. (GigaOm)

* Is Amazon’s rewards program, Amazon Prime, profitable? Probably not. But it is a vital part of the company’s long-term strategy. (Fortune)

* As reported yesterday, Barnes & Noble (BKS) released a $199 version of its recently introduced Nook Tablet with 8 gigabytes of storage, arguably to better combat Amazon’s Kindle Fire. (Barnes and Noble)

Don’t miss the latest tech news. Sign up now to get Today in Tech emailed every morning.

Filed under: Today in Tech

February 22 2012 | Posted in Tech Blog | Read More »

Amazon’s Prime and punishment

Is the retail giant’s rewards program profitable? Probably not. Is it a vital part of the company’s future? Almost certainly.

amazon_primeFORTUNE – Launched in 2005, Amazon Prime aimed to get customers to spend more. For $79 a year, members got free two-day delivery on an unlimited number of items. Amazon sweetened the pot from there. Last year, it introduced Prime Instant Videos, an unlimited movie and TV streaming service similar to Netflix. It also created the Kindle Owners Lending Library, a digital public library that makes select ebooks available for free. Only Prime members got access. Then, the company announced that each of its Kindle Fire tablets would come with a free month of membership in the box. Prime’s real purpose is now clear: it has become the retail giant’s Trojan horse into a broad range of businesses, from tablets to streaming media. As CEO Jeff Bezos doubles down on an ambitious growth strategy, Prime may very well be Amazon’s riskiest gamble in the company’s 17 year history. Not to mention its most promising.

Because Amazon does not break out Prime data, the number of subscribers remains a mystery. Estimates skew wildly between three million and ten million. (A Bloomberg report last week claimed growth was more sluggish than Amazon has let on.) What’s clear is that Prime members spend, upwards of three times what they would without the service, according to Well’s Fargo (WFC) analyst Matt Nemer. “Amazon (AMZN) wants to steal wallet share away and use other parts of its business to subsidize profitability,” adds Forrester (FORR) analyst Sucharita Mulpuru. (Amazon declined to comment for this story.)

Also nearly certain, that Prime is costing Amazon. Piper Jaffray (PJC) analyst Gene Munster believes Amazon is spending more money than it earns on the program — by as much as $11 per user. What’s more, the company lost some $2.4 billion last year in net shipping costs, a large part of that attributable to Prime shipping says Nemer. Amazon has shown it doesn’t mind lower margins to accommodate expansion, spooking some investors. In the most recent quarter, profits plunged 58% to $177 million, despite a 35% jump in sales, due to heavy investments in new sales fulfillment centers. “We believe that offering low prices to our customers is fundamental to our future success, and one way we offer lower prices is through shipping offers,” the company wrote in its 2011 annual report.

The market opportunity for a loyalty shipping program appears quite large. By one estimate, between 20 and 30 million U.S. households may be willing to pay for something like Prime. Shoprunner, a counteroffensive launched two years ago by GSI Commerce in partnership with over 40 brick and mortar chains like Toys ‘R Us and Radio Shack (RSH), remains the only other major competitor. Though Shoprunner drove more than $100 million in sales last year and now works with 60 retailers, analysts believe Prime remains dominant. To wit, Google (GOOG) reportedly wants to get into the game with a Prime-like service of its own.

Now, Prime is poised to grow. Already, the company has expanded its video service, inking a deal with Viacom (VIA). Prime Instant Videos has some 15,000 videos now, within striking distance of Netflix’s (NFLX) 20,000 titles. Kindle owners also have a more vast library of books to borrow from — about ten times larger — than they even did a few months ago. Both catalogs will only grow with time.

More interesting yet are the ways Prime could evolve. One of the few content areas Amazon hasn’t taken full advantage of yet is its MP3 music store. Offering a Spotify-like, all-you-can-listen service seems inevitable. Meanwhile, shipping times could be trimmed to one-day or same-day service. Amazon already offers same-day shipping in ten U.S. cities for Prime members, a convenience that could be extended across the country as the company builds more fulfillment centers near metropolitan areas. “If you’re a competing retailer, it should be in your plans that Prime will someday be a next-day or same-day delivery service with 100,000 free movies — it’s going in that direction,” chimes analyst Nemer.

If that day comes, Prime won’t just be a nominal loyalty program or balance sheet customer acquisition cost. It’ll be a monolith few can compete with.

Filed under: Uncategorized

February 22 2012 | Posted in Tech Blog | Read More »

Apple just doubled its addressable market in China

China Telecom, the country’s No. 3 carrier and No.1 Wi-Fi provider, gets the iPhone

Would-be iPhone 4S buyers in Beijing last month. Photo by Feng Li/Getty Images

“We’ve been very, very focused on China,” Apple (AAPL) CEO Tim Cook told the audience at last week’s Goldman Sachs technology conference.

One result of that focus became clear on Monday, when China Telecom (CHA), China’s No. 3 mobile carrier and No. 1 Wi-Fi and fixed-line provider (total subscribers: 216 million), announced that it will begin taking iPhone 4S preorders next week for sales starting March 9.

How big a deal is this? To put it in perspective, AT&T (T) sold 7.4 million iPhones last quarter — Apple’s biggest ever — Verizon (VZ) sold 4.2 million and Sprint (S) 1.8 million.

Click to enlarge.

As of January, China Telecom had 38.7 million 3G subscribers, roughly 15 million of whom, according to a recent Morgan Stanley report, are so-called high-end users who could easily afford — and are eager to buy — an iPhone. (See charts.)

China Unicom (CHU), the country’s No. 2 carrier, has more 3G subscribers (43 million), but roughly the same number of high-end subscribers as China Telecom. According to Morgan Stanley’s Katy Huberty, 20% of China Unicom’s users have already bought iPhones, a share she expects to eventually grow to more than 60%.

The big prize for Apple in China is still out of reach, however. China Mobile (CHL), the world’s largest carrier with more than 600 million subscribers, has been in discussions with Apple for years, and millions of its customers are already using jailbroken iPhones on its older 2G network. But sales won’t begin in earnest until Apple offers a 4G version of the iPhone that can run on China Mobile’s broadband network.

Huberty estimates that once that happens — perhaps as early as this fall — iPhone sales in China could quickly grow to 40 million a year.

Filed under: Apple 2.0

February 22 2012 | Posted in Tech Blog | Read More »

Intel’s (latest) mobile comeback

CEO Paul Otellini thinks he’s finally found a way to get Intel into the mobile game. Will phone makers take his call?

FORTUNE — There are two kinds of CEOs: Those who love the spotlight and those who hate it. Paul Otellini, chief executive officer of Intel, falls into the latter category. But in January, as he stood in front of several thousand people at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Otellini didn’t seem to mind the attention. In a Steve Jobs-like moment, he pulled a shiny four-inch smartphone out of his pocket and held it up for the audience to see. The device had plenty of bells and whistles, including front- and back-facing cameras and an HDMI output for high-resolution video.

Most striking of all was what the audience couldn’t see: the tiny Intel microprocessor — called Medfield — inside. The phone wasn’t for sale (it was a prototype Intel had put together), but the crowd cheered anyway. After years of delays and missteps, Intel, it seemed, finally had a viable product to show for its efforts in mobile phones.

“Would I have liked to be earlier? Yes,” Otellini told Fortune in an interview at the company’s Silicon Valley headquarters the week after his Las Vegas keynote. “Do I think this is a problem entering today? No, I think we’re in the beginning of this thing. We have the opportunity to redefine what computing means in your pocket, and I don’t see any other player in the industry with that potential.”

Intel  (INTC), with $54 billion in annual revenue, is the biggest chipmaker in the world. It employs 100,000 workers, including some of the brightest minds in the semiconductor industry. But when it comes to powering mobile phones, Intel is nowhere. Not a single commercially available mobile phone uses an Intel processor, and that’s no small problem, since much of the world is increasingly using mobile phones — and tablets — to do tasks once performed on desktops and laptops.

Intel’s prowess in building brawny, high-powered chips has been its biggest obstacle to cracking the mobile world, which requires low-power processors. A year and a half ago Otellini decided that Intel needed managers and engineers with hard-core mobile experience. He hired Mike Bell, an executive from Palm and Apple (AAPL) who had contributed to the development of the iPhone. Bell, who now co-leads Intel’s newly formed mobile and communications group, was charged with building a prototype, or reference design, that would show manufacturers what Intel could do in mobile. The device, which used the Medfield chip, became known internally as FFRD, short for form factor reference design (sexy code names are not Intel’s forte), and it paved the way for manufacturers like Lenovo and Motorola (MMI) to commit to launching Intel-powered devices sometime this year.

But Otellini knew he needed to do more than make a few key hires. In August 2010, Intel bought the wireless-solutions business from German chipmaker Infineon for $1.4 billion, giving Intel a foothold in baseband processors (a component that manages the 3G radio functions in a smartphone) and about 4,000 employees who know mobile devices.

For Otellini, getting it right in wireless isn’t just about diversifying revenue or driving the company into growing markets (though that’s part of it). Otellini’s mobile gambit is about redemption. Since becoming CEO in 2005, Otellini has stubbornly insisted that Intel could develop its own chips based on x86, the company’s historic microprocessor design standard, instead of licensing technology from the British company ARM Holdings, as most of his competitors have. So far his bet hasn’t paid off. The company proclaimed that its Moorestown system-on-a-chip would be in smartphones in early 2011, but instead it is mostly used in robotics and netbooks.

Ironically, Intel used to manufacture ARM processors for early smartphones and PDAs like the Palm Treo. But in 2006, Otellini sold its entire mobile product line, called XScale, to Marvell Technology Group for $600 million, essentially cutting off its access to mobile devices. And that wasn’t Intel’s only questionable move in mobile. In 2010, Otellini decided to partner with Nokia to develop MeeGo, a Linux-based operating system. A year later Nokia (NOK) ditched the project and opted to adopt Microsoft’s (MSFT) Windows Phone instead. Intel changed course and in September picked a new partner: Google (GOOG). Intel software developers worked to make sure that Android could run on the company’s chips without a glitch.

Intel’s mobile milestones

Pairing up with the world’s fastest-growing operating system is a smart move for Otellini (who has been on Google’s board since 2004). But there’s little question Intel has a lot of catching up to do. “The perception is that they’ve overpromised and underdelivered,” says Raj Seth, an analyst with Cowen Group.

Meanwhile the rest of the industry has moved ahead. Processors designed using ARM Holdings’ technology now power 90% of smartphones. Qualcomm (QCOM) leads the pack with 51% market share (see chart below).

Otellini insists the MeeGo debacle put Intel behind schedule by just two months. And when it comes to chip-manufacturing technology, he contends that Intel is about three years ahead of the competition.

Intel’s nine semiconductor factories churn out a collective 10 billion transistors per second. Its latest and greatest fabrication plant, called D1X, is in Hillsboro, Ore., about 20 miles west of Portland. D1X is one of the biggest construction projects in Oregon’s history. When the state-of-the-art facility opens next year, it will be the first 14-nanometer factory in the world. And it will have cost Intel upwards of $5 billion.

Keeping up with Moore’s law, which states that the number of transistors incorporated in a chip will approximately double every 24 months, is an expensive business that requires Intel to constantly invest in new manufacturing technologies and build new plants. But beyond the PC, it’s not clear how much that manufacturing lead is helping. The biggest facilities making ARM-designed processors today are based on a less advanced process than the one Intel uses to make its Medfield chip, for example, yet that hasn’t stopped the competition from eating Intel’s lunch. “Intel has tried to bring the same tools that have made it successful in the past to mobile, and it’s not working,” says Piper Jaffray analyst Gus Richard.

PCs still account for 66% of Intel’s revenue, and while Otellini is making an aggressive push in mobile, he’s also trying to breathe new life into Intel’s computer business by promoting ultrabooks, the latest breed of lightweight, instant-on laptops (a.k.a. the PC version of a MacBook Air). But there’s no doubt that mobile is where the real growth is. The market for mobile-phone chips will grow 40%, to $29.9 billion, by 2015, according to the Linley Group, a research firm.

Otellini has said that he expects to have Intel chips in 50% of the tablet market and 20% of smartphones by 2015. It’s an ambitious goal, but not impossible. The company is big enough and rich enough to eventually convert customers to its camp — as it did in 2005, getting Apple to use its Core Duo chip. “They’re very well resourced,” concedes Warren East, CEO of rival ARM Holdings (ARMH), “and they have a bunch of clever people.”

“This is a marathon, not a sprint,” says Otellini. “Intel has enough momentum in our core business and enough assets that we’re going to do this right. And we’re going to win in the long run.” If he’s wrong, and Intel can’t find its way into smartphones soon, Otellini may find himself back in the spotlight — for all the wrong reasons.

This article is from the February 27, 2012 issue of Fortune.

Filed under: Uncategorized

February 21 2012 | Posted in Tech Blog | Read More »

Today in Tech: A cheaper Nook Tablet coming this week?

Fortune’s curated selection of tech stories from the long weekend. Sign up to get the round-up delivered to you each and every day.

Inside a Foxconn factory. Photo: Karson Yiu/ABC News

* Apple (AAPL) granted ABC’s Nightline unfettered access to a Foxconn factory. Here’s a preview of what they found. (The full segment airs this evening at 11:35 PM EST and PST. (ABC News via Fortune)

* National Security Agency director Gen. Keith Alexander warned that the hacker group dubbed “Anonymous” could have the tools necessary to cause a limited power outage within the next two years. (The Wall Street Journal)

* Microsoft accused Google (GOOG) of essentially bypassing the privacy settings in Internet Explorer to track users. (The Verge)

* Andreessen Horowitz co-founder Ben Horowitz on why tech entrepreneurs should dispense with the business classes and listen to rap lyrics instead. (The New York Times)

* The design-focused e-commerce startup Fab.com, which recently hit 2 million users, is expanding into Europe with the acquisition of Casacanda in a deal valued at nearly $10 million. (Fab.com and The Wall Street Journal)

* Barnes and Noble (BKS) reportedly plans to launch an 8-gigabyte version of its Nook Tablet on Feb. 22 to better compete with Amazon’s $199 Kindle Fire. (The Verge)

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Filed under: Today in Tech

February 21 2012 | Posted in Tech Blog | Read More »