Qualcomm say 28nm chip supply to meet demand by year end

by Mark Tyson on 13 June 2012, 10:33

Tags: Qualcomm (NASDAQ:QCOM), ARM, TSMC

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A news report on Reuters this morning says that Qualcomm expects to be able to fulfil its bulging order book backlog by the year end. The US telecoms giant and chip maker has had very high demand and sold a record 158 million chips in the first quarter this year.

Qualcomm has had a few difficulties getting enough 28nm chips produced to meet the demand of its customers. Also increases in manufacturing expenditure were greater than expected. In particular it was in the news a couple of months ago that subcontractor TSMC wasn’t able to keep up with demand for the 28nm Snapdragon processor. The processor is a very popular one with good performance and powers many smartphones, tablets and even smart TVs.

The company is looking to put up some competition to NVIDIA’s Tegra 3 chips in smart mobile devices and recently detailed a new range of Snapdragons to take into battle. An initiative that’s only good if Qualcomm can actually supply the numbers manufacturers need. Better supply and competition means better prices for consumers in the long run.

Chairman and chief executive Paul Jacobs told Reuters that Qualcomm is working with TSMC and other foundries to increase supplies. “The goal is to get enough supply for everyone” he said.



HEXUS Forums :: 3 Comments

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Seems like 28nm has been a problem, Samsung only just seeming to get theirs running well too, my SGSIII seems very good with it's quad-core 28nm chip. Everybody I know seems to have a decent ARM chip in a device too now
The SGS3 actually has a 32nm chip in it. Samsung have only just moved over to the far more proven 32nm HKMG process (the same process previously used by intel and still used by amd) rather than the troublesome 28nm tsmc use.
Which I suspect is why apple wanted to ditch samsung in favor of tsmc but had to go crawling back when they couldn't make anywhere near as many chips as apple wanted.

The days of arm soc's are numbered though as intel's efforts are slowly gaining momentum and once the redesigned atom core built @ 22nm gets here everyone else will be eating there dust
I doubt that sweeping statement will come true…ARM are way ahead of Intel these days, something that won't change for many many years if it does at all…