As the PC market shrinks, Intel looks ahead to the Internet of Things
PC sales are dropping, but chipmaker Intel is already supplying low-power microprocessors for drones, wearable devices, and the Internet of Things.
Intel is putting its microprocessors in drones, skateboards, and other connected devices. Here, Intel CEO Brian Krzanich talks about the Yuneec Typhoon H drone at CES 2016 on January 5, 2016.
Rick Wilking/Reuters
PC sales have been slumping for years 鈥 a Gartner released on Wednesday estimated that about 8 percent fewer computers were sold in 2015 than in 2014, and that numbers would likely continue to decline in 2016.
On its face, that鈥檚 bad news for a company such as Intel, which since the 1990s has made most of its profit by supplying the microprocessors that power computers. But Intel, which will announce earnings on Thursday, has been supplying chips for a whole range of other devices for years now, and the company says it鈥檚 not dependent on PCs to be successful.
One huge new category is the Internet of Things, the web of interconnected household appliances, wearables, building sensors, and even cars that already includes more than 5 billion devices. Intel has already outlined a platform to let these devices talk to one another securely, and in December it acquired Altera, a company that makes programmable chips that can be used in Internet of Things devices.
During the CES 2016 technology show earlier this month, Intel showed off chips that can power smart skateboards, drones, and even clothes, including a dress that in response to the wearer鈥檚 body temperature.
鈥淲e think this an emerging sector that can sells hundreds of millions of these devices 鈥 the pieces of silicon,鈥 Intel chief executive officer Brian Krzanich USA Today鈥檚 Elizabeth Weise. "If every kid under the age of 30 鈥 wants that information, over time聽that鈥檚 a lot of devices when you look across the world.鈥
Since the sensors and microprocessors found in most Internet of Things devices are fairly inexpensive, it鈥檚 not yet clear whether Intel is going to be able to reap a lot of profit from the sector. But the company has another reason for making sure its chips are at the heart of as many Internet of Things devices as possible: Intel missed the boat on smartphones, and doesn鈥檛 want to repeat the experience.
Nearly all smartphones, beginning with the original Apple iPhone in 2007, relied on low-power processors based on the ARM architecture and built by Qualcomm and Samsung. Intel鈥檚 competing processor, Atom, hasn鈥檛 historically been as power-efficient, and phone manufacturers didn鈥檛 like the way Intel鈥檚 processors ate through smartphone and tablet battery life.
Intel doesn鈥檛 want to see the Internet of Things powered by a rival鈥檚 microprocessors, so the company has been devoting lots of resources to coming out with small, cheap, low-power chips, including the tiny 鈥溾 system-on-a-chip.