By Chaim Gartenberg, The Verge
Apple may be moving away from using Intel’s modems in future iPhones, with a new report from Calcalist
claiming that the Cupertino company has notified Intel that it will not
be using the chipmaker’s 5G modems in its 2020 product lineup (via 9to5Mac.)
As a result, Calcalist’s
report also notes that Intel has since stopped development of that 5G
modem — code named Sunny Peak — given that Apple was expected to be the
“main volume driver” for the modem. Instead, Intel is said to be
focusing on improving the planned product to try and woo Apple with a
better 5G modem for the company’s 2022 lineup.
The report isn’t entirely out of the blue, either — late last month, Bloomberg reported on a research note
from Northland analyst Gus Richard that claimed that Apple would be
looking to move away from Intel’s modems for ones made by MediaTek
instead. And that’s in addition to the rumors from earlier this year
that Apple would be looking to ditch Intel’s chips in its Mac products in 2020 — timing that lines up with the modem report, too.
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The
news does beg the question of where Apple would be getting its modems
if it does drop Intel. A research note from Apple supply chain analyst
Ming-Chi Kuo back in February indicated that Apple would be relying far more heavily on Intel’s modems for this year’s iPhones, in an effort to be less reliant on Qualcomm as a primary producer of the chips (the ongoing legal spat between Qualcomm and Apple likely didn’t help matters, either.)
It’s
possible that Apple is hoping to patch things up with Qualcomm by 2020,
or rely on new providers like MediaTek. But there’s also a chance that
the company may choose to take the same direction it took when it
started designing its own processors for its mobile devices and develop
modems in-house, giving the company even more control over the
components that make up an iPhone.
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