Mobile-end processors, including tablets and smartphones, are the unspoken wisdom of Intel. Because of the high power consumption, the British arm architecture of the mobile processor, has monopolized the market, Intel struggled.
However, Intel also has bad news, according to a U.S. technology media reported that Hewlett-Packard Company may be in the Slate tablet computer product line, abandon the Intel's Ling (Atom) processor. HP's reason for giving up is simple, the power of the Ling processor is too high, and the flat endurance is poor.
According to analysis, in the future, HP may use the ARM architecture of the mobile processor, while in the tablet computer, increase the proportion of the Android operating system.
In the current tablet product line, HP is not only using Windows, but also the Android system. In the Indian market, HP has also launched a small size Android tablet with call function, but the response is muted. HP also did not extend the call plate to more global markets.
HP has gone through too many twists and turns on mobile devices. In the early years, HP acquired the mobile operating system by acquiring Palm, renamed webOS and launched a range of webOS hardware, but suffered a market Waterloo.
In desperation, Hewlett-Packard terminated the webOS project and the operating system was transferred to LG Electronics in South Korea, which is now being used for mobile phones such as smart watches and smart TVs.
After the throes and reflections of HP's mobile strategy, which has been redefined as a windows-based and Android Tablet PC, HP has abandoned the smartphone market altogether.
If that were true, HP's defection to the arm architecture would be a huge blow to Intel's mobile-chip strategy.
Last year, in order to gain market share, Intel lowered its posture, listed Shenzhen as a "stronghold" for the revitalization of mobile chips, and a large subsidy to Chinese manufacturers (and even white-label manufacturers), which eventually completed the target of 40 million Intel Core panels. However, Intel's subsidy program for tablet manufacturers is being phased out because of the cost of too much (a $7 billion trillion loss in the mobile processor business for two years).
In the smartphone world, there are few manufacturers and models of Intel Mobile processors. The reason is simple, the power performance of the Ling processor is not as good as the ARM processor.