So much for one of the biggest tech courtroom battles in history.
As the smoke settles over Apple003 ArchivesQualcomm's sudden agreement to end all litigation between the two companies worldwide, the attention has now turned to the 5G iPhone.
With the tech giants no longer feuding, what does this mean for the 5G iPhone? Is it back on track for a 2020 release? Maybe, but it'll be tight.
SEE ALSO: Apple and Qualcomm just settled their massive legal battlePrior to Tuesday's unexpected settlement, many analysts were losing faith in Apple being able to deliver a 5G iPhone by 2020.
Earlier this month, UBS analyst Timothi Arcuri told investors there was "increasing potential that Apple may not be able to ship a 5G iPhone for 2020." He cited Apple's failure to secure necessary 5G modems as the main reason why a 5G iPhone might not ship until 2021 at the earliest.
Apple's problem with sourcing 5G modems has been two-fold: It couldn't get 5G modems from Qualcomm because the two were locked in litigations, and Intel, the sole supplier of 4G LTE modems in the iPhone XS and XR, appears to be behind schedule with its own 5G modems.
Without any supplier, a 5G iPhone in 2020 would have been impossible. However, the settlement could change things.
"I think it should mean Apple is back on track for a 2020 launch as long as Qualcomm has supply," says Carolina Milanesi, a consumer tech analysts at Creative Strategies.
Even if Qualcomm can't provide enough 5G modems to Apple in time for 2020, Milanesi thinks they could "prioritize some markets such as the U.S. and China for instance."
Other analysts aren't quite as optimistic. Though he still believes a 5G iPhone won't launch until 2021, Patrick Moorhead, president and principal analyst at Moor Insights & Strategy, says squeezing a 5G iPhone into 2020 would be "tight."
Though Apple and Qualcomm didn't disclose specific chip details to their agreement — only that the two companies "have reached a six-year license agreement, effective as of April 1, 2019, including a two-year option to extend, and a multiyear chipset supply agreement" -- it's very likely Apple will now have access to Qualcomm's 5G modems, such as the Snapdragon X55 5G modem announced in February.
With Qualcomm back in the supplier mix, the heat will be on for Intel to accelerate development of its "XMM 8160 5G multimode modem" if it wants to continue being a modem supplier for future iPhones.
More importantly, Qualcomm's return means Intel will need to step it up in terms of modem performance. While Intel's 5G modem is capable of "up to 6Gbps" download speeds, Qualcomm's X55 is already faster with advertised speeds of "up to 7Gbps".
Apple and Qualcomm's settlement couldn't have come at a better time. As phone makers release 5G phones and carriers begin to light up their 5G networks this year, it was becoming worrisome that Apple might be left behind the next mobile revolution. Now, it would appear Apple might have made it just in the nick of time.
The big question is whether Apple rushes out an iPhone to meet the 5G blitz that's planned for 2020 or it waits (like it's previously done with 3G and 4G) until the networks are more mature and deployment is widespread — what's the point of a 5G phone if you don't have a 5G network to use it on?
Topics 5G Apple iPhone
Introducing the Winners of the 2020 Whiting Awards by The Paris ReviewRedux: Spreading Privacies on the Internet by The Paris ReviewAnnouncing The Winners of the 2018 Whiting AwardsThe Most Appalling, Appealing Psychopaths by Lucy ScholesMemoir of a Born Polemicist by Vivian GornickSliding into Patricia Lockwood’s DMsOh, Heaven by Eloghosa OsundeSomeone Else’s Diary by Maria StepanovaSheri Benning’s “Winter Sleep” by The Paris ReviewStaff Picks: Viruses, Villages, and Vikings by The Paris ReviewA Taxonomy of Country Boys by Drew BratcherTakako Wanted Snow by Jana LarsonOne Word: Loose by Melissa FebosIntroducing the Winners of the 2019 Whiting Awards by The Paris ReviewImagining Nora Barnacle’s Love Letters to James Joyce by Nuala O’ConnorThe Novel as a Long Alto Saxophone Solo by Lucy ScholesThe Charms of Tom Stoppard by Hermione LeeAnnouncing The Winners of the 2016 Whiting AwardsRedux: The Clock Is Ticking by The Paris ReviewAnnouncing The Winners of the 2018 Whiting Awards The sun is teeming with intense activity, NASA footage shows The Webb telescope just looked inside our galaxy's core. It's wild. Spain vs. Georgia 2024 livestream: Watch Euro 2024 for free Watch the moment SpaceX Starship booster go boom Chinese startup Sharge unveils first mass Tesla loses its head of Giga Shanghai to a Chinee energy firm · TechNode China’s CATL aims to boost tech innovation by funding suppliers · TechNode NASA's Mars isolation experiment hits half Solar flares are shooting into space. How you'll know if one's trouble. Japanese spacecraft reaches moon's orbit, beams back images Stephen King shares his 2 line review of 'A Quiet Place: Day One' Watch how 6 planets orbit their star in perfect sync How astronauts make Thanksgiving dinner in space NYT's The Mini crossword answers for June 30 BYD reportedly sets up new team to work on AI algorithms, supercomputing · TechNode Djokovic vs. Kopriva 2024 livestream: Watch Wimbledon for free WeChat tests gift giving feature for online stores · TechNode PDD tests new feature allowing merchants to offer targeted return shipping · TechNode 'House of the Dragon' Season 2, episode 3 has a huge Daenerys connection Tour de France 2024 livestream: How to watch Tour de France for free
1.8941s , 10131.0546875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【2003 Archives】,Warmth Information Network