Rumor: Apple hiring former Texas Instruments chip engineers in Israel

Posted:
in General Discussion edited January 2014
In a bid to expand its chip-making business in Israel, Apple has reportedly hired a number of former Texas Instruments engineers living in the country, with the new employees said to bolster the tech giant's research and development resources in the region.

Teardown A6 Close
Apple's latest A6 SoC powers the new iPhone 5. | Source: iFixit


People familiar with Apple's developing Israel-based operations told The Next Web that the company has been hiring "dozens" of engineers to work in the cities of Haifa and Herzliya, the latter of which being the home base of Apple subsidiary Anobit. The Cupertino company purchased the flash memory maker in December of 2011.

The sources went on to say that Apple is picking up former TI employees who were laid off in a culling of 250 jobs at the company's Ra'anana location, which itself is part of a larger global workforce cutdown of around 1,700 employees. According to TI Israel's website, the Ra'anana campus was responsible for wireless connectivity solutions like WiFi, Bluetooth and GPS and OMAP products. OMAP, or Open Multimedia Applications Platform, is a type of system-on-a-chip developed by the Texas-based company currently being used in portable devices like Amazon's Kindle Fire HD.

Apple in April was reported to be gearing up for a major hiring campaign to fill spots at its Israel R&D center located in Haifa's Scientific Industries Center, which boasts a collective of high-tech companies like Google, Intel and IBM. The recent TI Israel hires won't be the first for Apple, as former Deputy CEO Etai Zaitsman is said to be working on the Haifa initiative headed up by Aharon Aharon, a veteran of Israel's tech industry.

In May, AppleInsider discovered a number of listings on Apple's job board for SoC engineers located in the Haifa and Herzliya Pituah regions of Israel.
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Comments

  • Reply 1 of 33


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  • Reply 2 of 33
    sockrolidsockrolid Posts: 2,789member
    Another small step toward the inevitable Intel-free Apple future.

    Intel Core i7: $1000.

    Apple A6X: $17.50.

    Do the math.
  • Reply 3 of 33
    hmmhmm Posts: 3,405member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by SockRolid View Post



    Another small step toward the inevitable Intel-free Apple future.

    Intel Core i7: $1000.

    Apple A6X: $17.50.

    Do the math.




    You already know those aren't feasible numbers.

  • Reply 4 of 33

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by hmm View Post




    You already know those aren't feasible numbers.



     


    True, but if you can also look at it this way.  An Intel Core i7 3610QM starts for $378.  Since Apple buys large volumes, let's just put it $300 for comparison sake.  The Intel part is 160 square millimeters.  That is roughly $1.88 per square millimeter in die area.


     


    If you look at the A6, it is 96.71 square millimeters for a total cost of $17.50.  That is $0.18 per square millimeter, or about a factor of 10 cheaper.

  • Reply 5 of 33

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Mr Beardsley View Post


     


    True, but if you can also look at it this way.  An Intel Core i7 3610QM starts for $378.  Since Apple buys large volumes, let's just put it $300 for comparison sake.  The Intel part is 160 square millimeters.  That is roughly $1.88 per square millimeter in die area.


     


    If you look at the A6, it is 96.71 square millimeters for a total cost of $17.50.  That is $0.18 per square millimeter, or about a factor of 10 cheaper.



     


    This is comparing apples (no pun intended) to oranges. Intel's process advantage right now is almost one whole node in front of everyone else. If they made A6 on Intel's latest process, it would probably run 1.5 times faster and use 75% the power.



    Furthermore, Apple isn't paying R&D costs when it is purchasing those chips from Samsung. Intel has to factor in the price of the billions it spends on R&D when it sells the i7-3610QM.



    Finally, if Intel made 3610QMs at the volumes that Apple uses A6s, the price would be far less than $300 since the marginal cost of each additional chip is quite small.

  • Reply 6 of 33
    gazoobeegazoobee Posts: 3,754member


    Israel is a pretty nasty country to do business with.  If they are going to start using Israeli manufacture for any significant portion of their product they definitely will lose some customers and a lot of public goodwill.  

  • Reply 7 of 33
    How would Apple it's largest single costumer not be paying for Samsung R&D through the price it pays. How else is it being paid?
  • Reply 8 of 33
    solipsismxsolipsismx Posts: 19,566member
    kenliles wrote: »
    How would Apple it's largest single costumer not be paying for Samsung R&D through the price it pays. How else is it being paid?

    That's like saying I'm paying for Apple's R&D cost when I buy a song on iTunes Store. Sure, a fraction of their total profits get put into R&D and you can use that same ratio to figure out what portion of that $1.29 is going for R&D but that's not what he stated.

    Apple isn't paying Samsung for R&D, they are paying them for production of R&D that Samsung has already worked out. You can contrast this to Apple having to invest in their chip production or Apple investing billions with LG to get them to R&D Retina displays.
  • Reply 9 of 33

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Gazoobee View Post


    Israel is a pretty nasty country to do business with...



     


     


    Here we go...


  • Reply 10 of 33
    solipsismxsolipsismx Posts: 19,566member
    analogjack wrote: »

    Here we go...

    I don't see anything wrong with his comment. His focus was on doing business in the country, not with the people. There are clearly some countries that are easier to do business with than others. I personally don't have any experience in this area but I've read about various laws that affect business in negative and positive ways. I would like to hear more specifics about his comment though.
  • Reply 11 of 33


    Originally Posted by SolipsismX View Post

    I don't see anything wrong with his comment. His focus was on doing business in the country, not with the people.


     


    The "loss of customers and goodwill" pretty much shows what he means.

  • Reply 12 of 33

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by SolipsismX View Post





    I don't see anything wrong with his comment..


     


    Says a country is 'nasty' to do business with, without any elaboration and you think that is acceptable, informed, useful, relevant comment? It's a ridiculous snide pointless and inflammatory comment.


  • Reply 13 of 33
    apple ][apple ][ Posts: 9,233member
    gazoobee wrote: »
    Israel is a pretty nasty country to do business with.  If they are going to start using Israeli manufacture for any significant portion of their product they definitely will lose some customers and a lot of public goodwill.  

    So don't buy anymore Apple products. They don't need your money. Apple doesn't make decisions based on what extremists might think.

    As for me, I'm liking Apple even more now.:smokey:
  • Reply 14 of 33
    solipsismxsolipsismx Posts: 19,566member
    The "loss of customers and goodwill" pretty much shows what he means.

    Ah, I didn't read the full comment, only the part AJ quoted.

    analogjack wrote: »
    Says a country is 'nasty' to do business with, without any elaboration and you think that is acceptable, informed, useful, relevant comment? It's a ridiculous snide pointless and inflammatory comment.

    How exactly did you get "I think it's acceptable, informed, useful, and relevant" from "I don't see anything wrong with"?
  • Reply 15 of 33
    wizard69wizard69 Posts: 13,377member
    gazoobee wrote: »
    Israel is a pretty nasty country to do business with.  If they are going to start using Israeli manufacture for any significant portion of their product they definitely will lose some customers and a lot of public goodwill.  

    Totally unjustified and completely uninformed! This is especially the case when it is obvious that much of the landscape surrounding Israel is suffering from a collapse of social and governmental responsibility.
  • Reply 16 of 33

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Gazoobee View Post


    Israel is a pretty nasty country to do business with.  If they are going to start using Israeli manufacture for any significant portion of their product they definitely will lose some customers and a lot of public goodwill.  



     


    I've got news for you, Gazoobee...


    http://www.intel.com/jobs/israel/

  • Reply 17 of 33
    wizard69wizard69 Posts: 13,377member
    solipsismx wrote: »
    analogjack wrote: »

    Here we go...

    I don't see anything wrong with his comment. His focus was on doing business in the country, not with the people. There are clearly some countries that are easier to do business with than others. I personally don't have any experience in this area but I've read about various laws that affect business in negative and positive ways. I would like to hear more specifics about his comment though.

    I think you need to retread the comment. There are all sorts of issues with every country Apple deals with, it isn't a perfect world. However the comment contained a threat that doing business with or in Israel will result in people taking a special exception to that relationship and somehow abandon Apple. That is the problem with the post as it demonstrates a specific hatred for the country.
  • Reply 18 of 33

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by wizard69 View Post





    I think you need to retread the comment. There are all sorts of issues with every country Apple deals with, it isn't a perfect world. However the comment contained a threat that doing business with or in Israel will result in people taking a special exception to that relationship and somehow abandon Apple. That is the problem with the post as it demonstrates a specific hatred for the country.


    If one were to keep up with current events then I doubt you would assume that his/her post demonstrates a specific hatred for the country. Instead it demonstrates a truism in a polarized world.


     


    One could have as easily said the opposite which I suppose we would then have to assume that it demonstrates a specific love for the country.


     


    Different strokes for different folks.

  • Reply 19 of 33
    Israel is currently a hotbed for IT mostly due to the quality of engineers and ease of doing business. Google, Intel, Microsoft and now Apple are all growing their businesses there.
  • Reply 20 of 33
    rayzrayz Posts: 814member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Gazoobee View Post


    Israel is a pretty nasty country to do business with.  



     


    Better or worse than China?

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