Roth Capital is sponsoring their 5th Annual Semiconductor Corporate Access Day today in San Francisco, and QuickLogic is presenting as announced. For those interested, you can view the presentation given today at Roth here. Questions?
Roth Capital is sponsoring their 5th Annual Semiconductor Corporate Access Day today in San Francisco, and QuickLogic is presenting as announced. For those interested, you can view the presentation given today at Roth here. Questions?
Thanks for the Roth presentation. I am curious as to why QUIK’s disruptive technology does not translate to Apple devices, and whether the technology that Apple uses or will use translates to Android devices. In other word, what is the competitive landscape? I realize this question may be naive, but I do wonder.
Hello Robert,
Thanks for the questions. We develop our sensor hub hardware to be OS-agnostic, meaning it could be purposed towards all common OS’s.
Addressing the larger issue, I can’t comment on any specific OEM’s usefulness on another platform. There is certainly pull from one to another — that is, often the adoption of certain technologies by one or multiple OEMs pushes the larger market to adopt those technologies as a standard. A great example of this is the larger displays that began appearing on certain phones (mostly Korean) in the 2011-ish time frame. Today, almost all OEMs have 5″ or greater displays on their flagship phones (and if the tech gossips sites are correct, the last holdout will finally be adopting large displays next week).
We touch on the sensor hub competitive landscape a bit in our ArcticLink 3 S2 introductory video, as well as at the following:
The Pros & Cons to Sensor Hub & Sensor Sub-System Management
The Paradigm Shift in Our Sensor Hub Approach
An MCU-to-Sensor Hub Question Addressed…