|
Date: 1st Mar 2010
It's the beginning of boom time for 3g
and 4g semiconductor chip vendors
Year 2010 is just the beginning of good times for semiconductor
chip vendors serving the broadband wireless market of 3g,
4g networks. Market researcher Instat has come out with
a report on LTE chipsets. The some of the points in the
report are,
By 2013, the total value of global end-use device silicon
will exceed US$2 billion, but still be early in the growth
cycle.
Much of the success in silicon will be made in low-noise
amplifiers, power amplification, analog-to-digital conversion,
SAW filters, and battery-life.
LTE RF solutions will have to have transceiver diversity
because many different channel spectra will have to be supported.
Most devices entering the LTE market will be dual-mode.
The "LTE-dedicated" silicon BOM for mobile handsets
will be slightly over US$125 in 2011 and decline by nearly
30% by 2013.
Instat states LTE is a great and truly evolutionary communications
platform and LTE will become the dominant 4G technology.
The LTE deployment as per Instat is going to be gradual
and protracted. The semiconductor manufacturers utilizing
this opportunity as per Instat includes Broadcom, Infineon
and Qualcomm, and new companies such as Altair Semiconductor,
Beceem, BitWave, Comsys, Sequans and Wavesat.
"Leading 3G baseband chipsets providers will not necessarily
keep their leadership in LTE," says Allen Nogee, In-Stat
analyst. "The changes in platforms and technologies
are disruptive enough to create major competitive shifts."
|