I
ippisl
Guest
Intel has released a new mcu.
Intel® Quark? Microcontroller D1000: Datasheet - $2-3 depending on volume.
In general nothing unique about this chip. it has a relatively lot of peripherals and the analog is nice - but it's expensive - and that's what counts in mcu's.
So i wonder - can intel win in mcu's ? does it have a unique technology that can help in mcu's ?
Also since they are less beholden to old products and revenues in the sector, they can just cut prices - price differently(for example not segment according to memory) ,etc.
And a relevant question - i know infineon has a 40nm cortex-m0 mcu , with 16KB-200KB flash /16KB ram. am i correct to assume it costs a few cents to make and a few cents to test such a chip ? and you're manufacturing costs actually comes down to package costs ? So them pricing it $1/10K is just arbitrary - it could theoretically may as well sell for half/third that given the cheapest package ?
Intel® Quark? Microcontroller D1000: Datasheet - $2-3 depending on volume.
In general nothing unique about this chip. it has a relatively lot of peripherals and the analog is nice - but it's expensive - and that's what counts in mcu's.
So i wonder - can intel win in mcu's ? does it have a unique technology that can help in mcu's ?
Also since they are less beholden to old products and revenues in the sector, they can just cut prices - price differently(for example not segment according to memory) ,etc.
And a relevant question - i know infineon has a 40nm cortex-m0 mcu , with 16KB-200KB flash /16KB ram. am i correct to assume it costs a few cents to make and a few cents to test such a chip ? and you're manufacturing costs actually comes down to package costs ? So them pricing it $1/10K is just arbitrary - it could theoretically may as well sell for half/third that given the cheapest package ?