Apple said to be working on “Project Azalea” to replace Samsung as chip maker

Over the last few days, several states have been hinting that they’re trying to attract a major semiconductor manufacturer to set up shop in the US, and some new details have just recently emerged. New York, California, Texas, and Oregon are all said to be competing to become home to a major chip maker that will have ties with Apple.

a6x-580x326

It’s said that this mysterious “Azalea” chip maker is actually the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, which is contemplating between building a new factory in either New York or Oregon. It was revealed that New York officials have been pitched plans for a 3.2-million-square-foot chip manufacturing factory believed to be for producing components for Apple’s mobile products.

Samsung currently builds all of the custom A-series processors that Apple uses in its iOS devices, and they’re built out of a plant in Texas, including the newest 32nm A6 chip used in the iPhone 5, and the A6X chip used in the fourth-generation iPad. However, rumors are suggesting that Apple is looking to move away from Samsung and make a deal with TSMC.

Essentially, the theory is that by getting rid of Samsung as Apple’s main chip maker, it would free Apple up to create their own chipset dynasty of sorts. Project Azalea would be their attempt to move away from Samsung and possibly make a deal with another chip maker as their exclusive provider of future A-series chips.

[via Apple Insider]

Apple said to be working on “Project Azalea” to replace Samsung as chip maker is written by SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Related posts

Latest posts

TCL is finally launching a phone in the U.S. with its unique Nxtpaper display

TCL's Nxtpaper phones have displays that provide protection from blue light and glare, and they're coming to the U.S. for the first time later this year.

TCL just announced a new Android tablet at CES that your eyes will love

TCL's next tablet — the TCL Nxtpaper 11 Plus — sounds mighty impressive, especially if you're tired of eye strain after long periods of use.

These unique smart glasses skirt hype and solve a real medical problem

SolidddVision smart glasses aim to restore vision for people living with macular degeneration, a condition that affects millions but has no medical cure.

These unique smart glasses skirt hype and solve a real medical problem

SolidddVision smart glasses aim to restore vision for people living with macular degeneration, a condition that affects millions but has no medical cure.

AMD brings back 3D V-Cache chips for gaming laptops

As part of its high-end gaming laptop chip lineup, AMD has announced the Ryzen 9 9955HX3D, bringing 3D V-Cache to mobile for the first time.

AMD is doing a victory lap with the new Ryzen 9 9950X3D

AMD has already claimed the top slot for gaming CPUs, but the Ryzen 9 9950X3D looks to extend that lead further.

AMD’s new Ryzen Z2 chip promises ‘console-class’ performance for the Steam Deck

AMD's hotly anticipated Ryzen Z2 range is finally here, and it'll start showing up in handhelds within months.

Acer has its own take on the Mac mini and iMac

Acer has announced a bunch of new Copilot+ PCs, including three desktop options. Are they enough to compete with Apple's iMac and Mac mini?

Dell is finally taking OLED monitors beyond gaming — for only $800

Dell has announced a 4K QD-OLED monitor, the company's first OLED monitor that isn't designed first and foremost for gaming.

30 years later, XPS is dead. Here’s why Dell is killing its flagship brand

Dell's iconic XPS brand will be retired this year, along with many of the other Dell sub-brands. But what's replacing them?