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For a long time, Apple has been seeking to reduce its smartphone modem reliance on Qualcomm. It used Intel parts alongside Qualcomm’s in its handsets for a few years, but after the settlement between Apple and Qualcomm a couple of months ago, Intel was left out, forced to leave the nascent 5 G modem company with no other clients backed up. Now Apple has recently ahead and, as earlier speculated, has purchased Intel’s smartphone modem company. Apple is paying $1 billion for the operation, which is supposed to end in this year’s fourth semester. Approximately 2,200 Intel portable staff will enter Apple together with intelligent estate, facilities and rents. After the agreement is concluded, Apple will retain more than 17,000 wireless technology licenses by integrating the items it receives from Intel, varying from protocols for cellular norms to modem architecture and implementation. For PCs, IoT phones, and autonomous vehicles, Intel will still be prepared to create modems-all but smartphones. Apple will therefore put a large modem design squad in-house for use in iPhones a few years down the road, which should assist it develop its own competitive alternatives for Qualcomm’s. According to Johny Srouji, Apple’s executive deputy chairman of hardware technology, this will “enable Apple to further distinguish going forward.” (Visited 25 times, 1 visits today)
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