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For High-End CPUs, Qualcomm Ditches TSMC For Samsung

An anonymous reader writes: A report at Re/code says Qualcomm will have its next-gen Snapdragon 820 CPU made at Samsung's foundries, instead of TSMC's. The report points out a couple of good reasons for the switch: first of all, Samsung's plants run on a 14nm process, while TSMC still uses a 20nm process. Second — and more telling — Samsung recently ditched Qualcomm's Snapdragon processors for their new Galaxy S6 smartphone, opting to use their own Exynos chips instead. With the phone expected to sell upwards of 70 million units, that's a huge missed opportunity for Qualcomm. It's feasible Qualcomm could get Samsung to drop its own chips, because the Snapdragon 820 will have an onboard LTE modem. That would reduce the cost of assembling a phone, and also free up some space to make it smaller.

27 comments

  1. Good riddance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Qualcomm has been horrible about driver support since smartphones were a thing.

    1. Re:Good riddance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      I had the first Qualcom/Sprint cellphone with a lifetime plan, no monthly service charge, and free phone upgrades, for life. The phucks at Sprint refused to replace the phone after it broke 15 years later, had to buy a new service plan or cancel. Cancelled and will never go with Sprint.

    2. Re:Good riddance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well the small print was the "lifetime of the phone".

    3. Re:Good riddance by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 1

      They're "horrible" but they are, sadly, the best now that TI has exited the business.

      MTK is notorious for giving their customers C&D letters when they dare to comply with the GPL (Google is cracking down on this with Android One, but I know of at least one non-One device that had its kernel sources C&Ded by MTK.)
      Rockchip and company are no better
      Samsung publishes no reference source that matches any production devices (I speak from experience here - back in 2012/2013 I was one of the CyanogenMod co-maintainers for Samsung Exynos4 devices. Every member of the team got sick of dealing with Samsung's crap and lack of documentation, we all switched to Qualcomm)
      Nvidia was horrible but have improved a lot with the SHIELD family of devices, although I dislike their approach to AOSP support. They have a lot of closed-source binary HALs (just like Samsung) but at least don't hack the interfaces of those HALs in ways that break compatibility with AOSP. Unfortunately this means that if you find an issue with the HAL (such as not supporting AC3 passthrough) there's nothing you can do about it.

      Qualcomm is no angel (see the Nexus 4 and Nexus 7 factory image messes), but with their CAF reference sources, they're better than anyone else currently in the business about software support.

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      retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
    4. Re:Good riddance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, which part of "free phone upgrade" did you not understand?

  2. Handset makers will be thrilled. by SeaFox · · Score: 1, Interesting

    It's feasible Qualcomm could get Samsung to drop its own chips, because the Snapdragon 820 will have an onboard LTE modem. That would reduce the cost of assembling a phone, and also free up some space to make it smaller.

    Yes, because the reason Android phones are so big is because they can't make the circuit boards smaller due to component count. It has nothing to do with stupid one-upsmanship on screen size.

    1. Re:Handset makers will be thrilled. by gl4ss · · Score: 3, Informative

      it's just a total bullshit line.

      next gen exynos is likely to have lte on die too.

      what the article submitter did not understand is this: the fabbing business is ran as a separate business and doesn't have ties like that.

      the submission "insightful" trying text is even more stupid due to the fact that samsung has been using snapdragons on some phones for YEARS!

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      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    2. Re: Handset makers will be thrilled. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      There is no mistery here. TSMC simply doesn't give a single fuck about loosing a big client. Their capacity is booked for years onwards, and they will have no problem running few smaller batches instead of single huge one, as semi foundries are highly automated

    3. Re:Handset makers will be thrilled. by Wrath0fb0b · · Score: 1

      For a fixed dimension phone, smaller circuit board means more volume free for the battery pack.

    4. Re:Handset makers will be thrilled. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >fabbing business is ran as a separate business and doesn't have ties like that.
      have you been asleep for the last decade? the problem right now is that a big company buys up capacity and hints that if they expand, they'll take their business elsewhere. QCOM has been pressuring TSMC for years; TSMC called their bluff and signed a huge contract with APPL. QCOM wasn't bluffing.

    5. Re:Handset makers will be thrilled. by SeaFox · · Score: 1

      For a fixed dimension phone, smaller circuit board means more volume free for the battery pack.

      Okay, I see where you're coming from. You're saying the "making it smaller" is referring to the circuit board, not the phone. That is one way to interpret it. Unfortunately, grammatically that's not what they said. Since the full sentence reads "That would reduce the cost of assembling a phone, and also free up some space to make it smaller." the pronoun "it" would be referring to the subject of the sentence -- the entire handset.

    6. Re:Handset makers will be thrilled. by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 1

      Not really. With a few exceptions, circuit boards are thin. Very few manufacturers use 3D techniques (daughterboards, etc.) especially not in mobile.

      So "larger circuit board" means "more area but rarely thicker".

      "more area at same thickness" means "wider/taller device"

      "wider/taller device" means "more room for battery".

      --
      retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
  3. TSMC still using 20nm process?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    TFA sounds a lot like a PR piece from Samsung
     
    There have been quite a number of articles circulating on the Net lately claiming that TSMC is stuck with the 20nm geometry
     
    No doubt Samsung has gone to 14nm, a notch higher than what TSMC could offer (16nm), but why Samsung has to continue spreading such despicable lies?

    1. Re:TSMC still using 20nm process?? by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      This has nothing to do with Samsung, it has everything to do with tech process problems which spread well beyond the mobile. Case to point: desktop GPUs.

  4. Fab/=Design by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Two different businesses entirely. customers choose foundries based only on capability and yield.

  5. Stock price impact. by goombah99 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What is interesting is that some of the recent predictions about QCOM are not accurate. Lately QCOM stock has been heading down under two clouds. The first cloud is that the IEEE council appears to have sided with apple and other handset makers that the value of a FRAND license is not relative to the value of the phone (which has been the case up until now) but relative to value of the component that contains the patent. The rationale is simple: if the same component embodying the same patent could be in a cheap phone then the value should be tied to the common component. The latter is said to be about 1/10th the value of a high end phone. Thus QCOMs business model which includes royalties hit a snag. Thus it becomes vital that the components become expensive (and thus only be suited for expensive phones)---and the way to acheive that is to bundle up features into one uber component. Put the LTE in the processor. This is how they solve their problem.

    The second reason the stock was headed down appears like it might be wrong information now. TMSC reported a huge drop in expected orders in the next year. It was known Qualcom was the cause of the reduced orders (well convincingly rumored). And thus it was assumed that qualcom was experience a loss of demand and reducing its TMSC orders. Thus the TMSC loss fed right into a QCOM stock price drop. But now we learn the drop was not QCOM reducing orders because of lack of demand for Qcom products but QCOM switching foundaries.

    Since QCOM is switching boundaries so the TMSC part of the stock price drop was mistaken.

    Finally, QCOM may be going upscale with a more costly process and going even more upscale by bundling patents into components. SO in one move they fix their business model problem. It makes sense too since broadcom has been targeting the low end SOC and wifi market where they can win on volume. Rather than compete at the low end where Broadcom could put Qcom patents in cheap hardware and pay little on the FRAND costs, QCOM veers luxury where it supports their patent portfolio and maximizes the value of their research. It turns their fabless strategy into an advantage that is harder to steal. smart.

    It would not be surprising to learn that Samsung made some concession to win the 14nm business, such as promoting it in a next gen phone. Samsung is very familiar with partnering with their competitors--- see their cozy relationship with mortal enemy apple.

    I'm thinking this is a huge deal for QCOM. Or at least a huge deal for their stock.

    --
    Some drink at the fountain of knowledge. Others just gargle.
    1. Re:Stock price impact. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, what you're saying is that the patents are creating a distortion in the market that forces suboptimal engineering decisions, in this case integrating parts that would otherwise be cheaper if discrete?

      This is reason enough why patents should not exist.

    2. Re:Stock price impact. by goombah99 · · Score: 1

      So, what you're saying is that the patents are creating a distortion in the market that forces suboptimal engineering decisions, in this case integrating parts that would otherwise be cheaper if discrete?

      This is reason enough why patents should not exist.

      No that's not what I said. In fact this is a great example of the patent system working well. first the patent royalties are what led Qualcom to develop technology and then agree to share it via FRAND. and FRAND lisencing is what allowed a proprietary technology to be incorporated into a standard. Both are great!! finally, when there was a FRAND dispute over what was "reasonable" (the R in FRAND), the IEEE adjudicated. I think they reached the right conclusion but any conclusion would have been a hearing of the parties involved. So this isn't a case you want to dress in the arguments you made.

      --
      Some drink at the fountain of knowledge. Others just gargle.
    3. Re:Stock price impact. by goombah99 · · Score: 1

      errrata: I typoed TSMC as TMSC

      --
      Some drink at the fountain of knowledge. Others just gargle.
    4. Re:Stock price impact. by edxwelch · · Score: 2

      Sorry, but you are wrong and so is the article. The main advantage of an integrated modem is power. The modem is basically a processor and if it's on the SoC it can share the memory bus, which reduces power consumption. It also, means less components and cheaper BoM.

    5. Re:Stock price impact. by goombah99 · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but you are wrong and so is the article. The main advantage of an integrated modem is power. The modem is basically a processor and if it's on the SoC it can share the memory bus, which reduces power consumption. It also, means less components and cheaper BoM.

      perhaps it makes the phone cheaper (or alternatively more capable and just as expensive), but either way, with fewer discrete components the individual combined component cost remains high. If other makers respond in kind QCOM wins too: by putting the LTE modem in the same die as the cpu, then the royalty qual com gets for the LTE patent applies to now more expensive combined component. Thus their revenues rise.

      --
      Some drink at the fountain of knowledge. Others just gargle.
    6. Re:Stock price impact. by edxwelch · · Score: 1

      That's not the way it works.
      Qualcomm is successful because their modems support *all* telecom protocols, not just LTE. That's know as a "world modem". No other company has that support. So, if they want to sell their phone in a certain market they have to use a Qualcomm modem. If they try to use a Qualcomm modem solution, with a third party SoC the manufacture gets charged a penalty - the same modem is a lot cheaper if you pair it with a Snapdragon SoC. And *that's* how Qualcomm make their money.

    7. Re:Stock price impact. by goombah99 · · Score: 1

      which is simply saying what I said.

      --
      Some drink at the fountain of knowledge. Others just gargle.
  6. The Apple Effect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If TSMC has dedicated its best fab lines to Apple, Qualcomm will just have to go elsewhere. Let Samsung's handsets stew in its inferior chips.

  7. Samsung does not have a 14nm process. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They have a hybrid process, part 14nm part 20nm.

  8. why did Samsung have Exynos if weren't using it? by electrosoccertux · · Score: 1

    can anyone explain why Samsung went to the trouble of designing Exynos if they weren't going to use it everywhere?

    From what I can tell they were used in their foreign mobile offerings (international Galaxy versions), possibly because of different LTE patents required for US use, and possibly due to less competition from handset manufacturers meant they didn't need to differentiate on performance. Still, I'm surprised one would go to the trouble designing their own SOC and not go to the trouble of using that R&D investment everywhere.