DigiTimes is reporting that Apple is considering using Intel’s Moorestown mobile device platform in a future iPhone.
Moorestown was introduced last month at the Intel Developer Forum, although not expected until 2009, Moorestown chips will be based on Intel’s 45-nanometer manufacturing process and therefore promise to be ten times more power-efficent than today’s embedded mobile chips, enabling longer battery life in smaller form factors.
Moorestown will combine the CPU, graphics, video and memory controller onto a single chip. Based on Intel’s “Menlow” MID design due out a year earlier, it will also incorporate wireless technologies such as Wi-Fi, 3G and WiMAX.
Apple currently uses the similar Samsung SoC processor which is based on the ARM architecture.


Comments and Trackbacks
All comments made are owned by their authors. Please keep discussion clean and relevant to the main article. Basic HTML tags can be used for formatting comments, and avatars are provided by the Gravatar service.
Trackback link for this entry | RSS Feed for comments
The following sites have trackbacked to this entry:
The following comments have been added by readers: