Art Wittmann

Managing Director, InformationWeek Reports


Upcoming Events

A Network Computing Webcast:
SSDs and New Storage Options in the Data Center

March 13, 2013
11:00 AM PT / 2:00 PM ET

Solid state is showing up at every level of the storage stack -- as a memory cache, an auxiliary storage tier for hot data that's automatically shuttled between flash and mechanical disk, even as dedicated primary storage, so-called Tier 0. But if funds are limited, where should you use solid state to get the best bang for the buck? In this Network Computing webcast, we'll discuss various deployment options.

Register Now!


Interop Las Vegas 2013
May 6-10, 2013
Mandalay Bay Conference Center
Las Vegas

Attend Interop Las Vegas 2013 and get access to 125+ workshops and conference classes, 350+ exhibiting companies and the latest tech.

Register Now!

More Events »

Subscribe to Newsletter

  • Keep up with all of the latest news and analysis on the fast-moving IT industry with Network Computing newsletters.
Sign Up

See more from this blogger

Intel On The Wrong Side Of Moore's Law

Intel CEO Paul Otellini is calling it quits a few years early. It shouldn't come as a shock. The 62-year-old has seen Intel through some interesting times. And while the company remains the biggest manufacturer of chips in the world, the next few years will prove vexing for Intel--to say the least.

Before I tackle the future of Intel and what needs to happen post Otellini, let's get some market context. Let's say it's 2002, and you're pondering your investments. You've got a few hundred dollars to throw around, and so you invest in the high-tech blue chips IBM, Oracle and Intel. For your last hundred, you go the risky route and buy ARM Holdings.

More Insights

Webcasts

More >>

White Papers

More >>

Reports

More >>

Flash-forward to current times. How did you do? Your $100 in IBM is now $245--nicely done. Your $100 in Oracle is now $315--no complaints there. Your Intel investment didn't do so well--it's worth just $107 now. But ARM more than made up for your bad choice with Intel, because that $100 is now worth $1,200. That's right, ARM up 1100%, Intel up 7%.

You're probably saying that's not fair. Intel is a well-established company, ARM is more of a startup--of course ARM will outperform. Let's test the notion that ARM is a startup. First, it's been around too long to be considered a startup, but, even more important, look at market capitalization: Intel is worth about $100 billion, and ARM is worth $50 billion. Yes, according to market sensibilities, ARM is worth three times what Dell is, about 80% more than VMware and about the same as EMC--and the company doesn't actually make a thing. That's some darn good intellectual property there.

There are few lessons we can take from this. The first is the gross, insane nonsense of market capitalizations for high-flying tech stocks. Sure, ARM gets a ton of credit for being in the right place at the right time, and it's doing a masterful job of providing the right technology to its customers, but a $50 billion market capitalization seems a bit extreme.

Back to Otellini. Intel finds itself in the ironic position of being on the wrong side of Moore's Law. Gate sizes are now so small and performance is so good that for most applications, the market will no longer reward Intel for squeezing more performance onto a single chip--whether it be through more cores, or added cache, or even bringing some of Intel's other parts like memory managers and I/O controllers on board.

In fact, the market hasn't been rewarding it for years. While ARM was in the right place at the right time with low-power designs, its licensing model is the real secret. Licensing allows others, including Nvidia, Qualcomm and Texas Instruments, to use some of the chip real estate for what they do best--like video, radio and sound processing with specialized circuitry. Intel not only was terribly late to the very-low-power CPU market, it also failed to see that, because of Moore's Law, the rules had to change with regard to its customers. Intel must now find a way to let others stake out some on-chip real estate.

Whether Otellini sees this or not is anyone's guess, but the enigma of the market is surely one driving force in his early retirement (for all I know, his golf handicap may play a much bigger role). It's clear that Intel's vast investments in developing new processes and the intense capital investment in retooling for each new fabrication process every two years or so is seen by the market as a bad thing.

One radical idea is to break Intel into two parts: a fabrication house and a design house. Of course, there's no guarantee that such a move would produce better results--there are plenty of fabless semiconductor houses that struggle to make a profit, too.

While Moore's Law takes away (killing old business models and design goals), it also brings new opportunity. The challenge for Otellini's successor will be to change its business models just as quickly.

Art Wittmann is director of InformationWeek Reports, a portfolio of decision-support tools and research reports. You can write to him at awittmann@techweb.com.


Related Reading


Network Computing encourages readers to engage in spirited, healthy debate, including taking us to task. However, Network Computing moderates all comments posted to our site, and reserves the right to modify or remove any content that it determines to be derogatory, offensive, inflammatory, vulgar, irrelevant/off-topic, racist or obvious marketing/SPAM. Network Computing further reserves the right to disable the profile of any commenter participating in said activities.

 
Disqus Tips To upload an avatar photo, first complete your Disqus profile. | Please read our commenting policy.
 
IaaS Providers
Cloud Computing Comparison
With 17 top vendors and features matrixes covering more than 60 decision points, this is your one-stop shop for an IaaS shortlist.
IaaS Providers

Research and Reports

The Virtual Network
February 2013

Network Computing: February 2013

Upcoming Events



TechWeb Careers