With Eyes on China, Intel Invests Billions In Mobile Ambitions
itwbennett writes The allure of mobile devices has led Intel to take some uncharacteristic moves, partnering with Chinese companies to build some smartphone and tablet chips, and relying on third parties to manufacture those chips. Intel is betting the partnerships will accelerate its business in China, where smartphone shipments are booming. But the company wants to regain complete control over manufacturing, and on Thursday said it was investing $1.6 billion over 15 years in a China plant for mobile chip development and manufacturing.
And thus does Intel make the same mistake that hundreds of companies around the world have made before it: putting intellectual property in physical reach of the Chinese government. Fast forward five years and I'm almost certain we'll see Foxconn or some other Chinese company with ties to the Chinese government have a series of "research breakthroughs" that mysteriously parallel the exact technologies that Intel brought to its own plant, which is once again down for "inspection".
It's not like this sort of thing hasn't happened already.
Regain control of your IP and manufacturing OR invest in a Chinese manufacturing plant. Pick one!
We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
Intel is learning that success doesn't come as easy in business segments where your tried-and-true monopolist practices don't apply.
Investing in Chinese companies is probably a tactic to get on the good side of the Chinese government.
Consider what Intel is doing in China: giving away subsidised SoC's that compete directly with local Chinese companies. That sort of anti-competive behavour normally attacts tariffs (a similiar sort of thing has happen before US Department of Commerce Ignores WTO, Imposes Preliminary Anti-Dumping Tariffs of 26-165%
The high rate of employee turnover, politics, and finger pointing that goes on in the China office I work with (aprox 300 engineers in Beijing) is shocking. I don't know how a company can expect to be sucessful at doing real engineering and development work over there.
Intel spends upwards of $7 billion to make a fab. What they are doing is not a fab.
Intel already has big assembly test manufacturing sites in China and has had it since last century. CD1 and CD6 are huge.
http://download.intel.com/newsroom/kits/22nm/pdfs/Global-Intel-Manufacturing_FactSheet.pdf
$2 billion in 15 years is $130 M/yr. The CEO, Krzanich, makes $9M/ year. This is only about 15x his salary. The Intel board take-home pay is larger than this "investment".
TFA article headline:
"Intel plunks down billions to expand in mobile market"
Slashdot article headline:
"With Eyes on China, Intel Invests Billions In Mobile Ambitions"
What's the difference? Every word in /. is in Caps!
What's the point of this? Is it a deliberate attempt to confuse and corrupt? Look at headlines in any respectable publication and you will find sensible, understandable headlines. Major words in caps, Trademarked words in caps ... Slashdot's insistence on every word starting in a capital letter is juvenile and misleading and not conforming to any journalistic standard.
Just stop it or you'll hear from me again on this.
...omphaloskepsis often...