Intel investors, Intel pulling more function into chipsets. Mentions hit to Broadcom and 3 COM business. I wonder if their stocks might get hit.
Intel Plans Ethernet Functions For PC Chips
"We will integrate Ethernet and home-networking in the chipset," Christensen said in an interview at the Intel Developer Forum (IDF) in Palm Springs, Calif.
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Intel Plans Ethernet Functions For PC Chips
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 2000 7:47 AM - TechWeb
Feb 21, 2000 (Tech Web - CMP via COMTEX) -- Aspiring to extend its dominance of PC architecture to the networking arena, Intel plans to integrate some major networking functions onto its PC chipsets in the near future.
The move could diminish the need for stand-alone LAN chips and systems and pose a threat to several suppliers, industry analysts said.
Intel would not go as far as to say that it wants to kill the LAN-chip and -equipment business. After all, it sold more than $1 billion worth of LAN-based systems and chips last year, analysts said.
But in the future, PCs will be integrated with more communications functions, and Intel wants to be a part of that, said Mark Christensen, vice president and general manager of Intel's Network Communications Group, Santa Clara, Calif.
"We will integrate Ethernet and home-networking in the chipset," Christensen said in an interview at the Intel Developer Forum (IDF) in Palm Springs, Calif.
Core-logic products that integrate Ethernet-based functions would be geared primarily for the lower-priced, consumer-oriented PC segments, he added.
Intel did not disclose specific details of the proposed chipset, but the company could roll out a product by year's end, according to analyst Dean McCarron of Mercury Research, Scottsdale, Ariz.
"It's not a real technical challenge for Intel to integrate the Ethernet functions in the chipset," McCarron said. "Intel could come out with this type of product within the next six months."
Intel isn't the first company to come up with the idea. Taiwanese chipset maker Silicon Integrated Systems has been selling an integrated product that combines PC, audio, modem, and LAN functions on the same device, McCarron noted. "I wouldn't say Intel is late in this market," he said. "A company like Intel isn't too worried about SIS."
In fact, Intel is taking a different approach than SIS. The company plans to separate and integrate one of two main portions of a stand-alone Ethernet-based 10/100-Mbit/s chip, the media-access controller, into the PC core logic. The other major portion of an Ethernet-based chip, the physical-layer device, would be separated and integrated in a stand-alone board called a riser card, which is installed in a simple PCI slot in the PC.
Recently, Intel announced a new version of this riser-card architecture, called the Communications and Networking Riser Specification. The card supports audio, modem, and now LAN functions, ostensibly providing a cost savings for OEMs.
The new version is designed to handle LAN functions as well as home networking, including protocols based on the emerging Home Phoneline Networking Alliance standard.
The move is reminiscent of the company's push to integrate audio and modem functions in the PC architecture. Intel's Audio Codec standard nearly destroyed the stand-alone audio-chip market, according to analysts. OEMs are beginning to adopt so-called software-modem products, leaving the stand-alone modem-chip industry in limbo as well.
"It's fair to say that this will be a repeat of what happened in the [PC] audio industry," said Conrad Maxwell, manager of product and technology planning at Conexant Systems, Newport Beach, Calif.
If so, Intel's new strategy poses a major threat to several companies, including 3Com, Santa Clara, and its chip suppliers, Broadcom and Lucent Technologies.
"Intel is also a major customer of our [home-networking and LAN] silicon," said Tony Zuccarino, director of business development at Broadcom, Irvine, Calif. "Right now, it's hard to say what Intel will do."
"Clearly, Intel drives the PC market. But I still think you're looking at three or more years of computers that need LAN cards," said Rick Hall, national account manager at Linksys, a major LAN-card supplier based in Irvine.
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