Interview w/ Eric, Part XI A. Well if by this you are referring to a possible transition of some of the business to mother board, this doesn't bother us or worry us at all because we are players in this segment of the market. We don't believe it is a large segment. Nor will it become a large segment because it is still a very fast changing field. And there is still a lot of new things that have to go into this communication subsystem frontend. Often times it is a bother, it is a constraint to have everything hard coded in the mother board itself.
Nevertheless, there are segments which will be perfectly acceptable. And therefore we will compete in that business, and in fact we are today. If you open a Dell Computer right now you will see that it has 3Com chips on its mother board. You will also see that some other Dell Computers have 3Com NICs in them.
So the fact that Intel is there with silicon expertise has not really helped them all that much from a technical standpoint. The factories that they use will always give priority to Pentiums and processors. Paradoxically, this is a semi-conductor company that is a bit like the cobbler who mistreats his children. In other words, we are going to get better, more advanced technology from our foundries than we would if we were a division of Intel.
Indeed today they use fairly old, outdated technology that has a higher flaws- per-die than we do. We use smaller geometries. We have higher yields on our fab lines. And all of this gives us the technological advantage.
But if we go back to the fundamental trend in the industry, which is end-to-end connectivity, it's very clear to us that a piece of the network that exists in a computer or in an appliance on a connected organizer or a server, is an integral part of the connectivity chain that cuts across the entire network. It has to evolve in synchrony with the rest.
When you add new protocols, when you add policy intelligence, when you add encryption, when you add quality of service, it has to be end to end. It has to be incorporated in that sub system. So we believe that the dynamic that drive this piece of the computer are very different from the dynamics that drive the MIPS inside the processors. |