Skip to main content

Apple is reportedly about to buy Intel’s modem business

Apple already makes its own processors for the iPhone, but it looks like the company could be nearing a deal that would help it make its own modems in-house too. According to a recent report from the Wall Street Journal, Apple is within a week of agreeing to buy Intel’s modem business.

The deal is said to be in advanced talks, and the report notes that it would be valued at $1 billion or more. While Apple often makes smaller deals without any sort of announcement, it’s likely Apple and Intel will make some kind of announcement if the deal does happen.

The deal isn’t necessarily all that surprising. Apple has been known to want to do as much of the designing and manufacturing in-house as possible — an ethos that led it to start building its own processors, which are now largely considered to be the best mobile chips in the world. Apple has also started building its own security chips for Mac computers, with the current-generation called the Apple T2 Security Chip. Eventually, Apple likely hopes to use only Apple-built tech in both the iPhone and Mac range of products.

Apple has had a bit of a rough road to getting 5G modems for the iPhone. The company had a long and difficult court battle with Qualcomm over license fees and patents, leading it to make a deal with Intel for modems. Intel, however, reportedly had a tough time developing its own mobile 5G modems — and as a result Apple and Qualcomm eventually patched things up and agreed to a six-year license agreement for modems. It’s unclear whether Apple is required to use Qualcomm modems as part of that agreement but as a result of the deal, Intel announced that it would be exiting the 5G modem business.

According to some reports, after the Apple-Qualcomm deal, Intel began looking for a buyer for its vast portfolio of modem-related patents and staff, and Apple as a buyer makes a lot of sense. Apple was reportedly already working on building its own modems, and will presumably phase out Qualcomm modems in favor of its own once it has developed the modems enough to be ready for the mainstream.

Editors' Recommendations

Christian de Looper
Christian’s interest in technology began as a child in Australia, when he stumbled upon a computer at a garage sale that he…
Apple confirms USB-C is coming to iPhones, but it’s still bitter about it
The Lightning port on the iPhone 14 Pro Max.

Apple is going to embrace the USB-C port for iPhones, ditching the Lightning standard that it has held on tightly for years. In an interview with The Wall Street Journal, Apple’s Senior Vice President of Worldwide Marketing, Greg Joswiak, confirmed that Apple is going to comply with the EU’s decision of mandatorily putting a USB-C port for a wide range of electronic gadgets, including iPhones.

“Obviously, we’ll have to comply,” Joswiak told Joanna Stern when quizzed about the transition away from Lightning to the eventual USB-C destiny for iPhones. “We have no choice as we do around the world to comply to local laws. But we think the approach would have been better environmentally, and better for our customers to not have a government be that prescriptive,” he added.

Read more
My favorite iPhone 14 feature is one Apple has barely talked about
Christine Romero-Chan using her iPhone 14 Pro with an Anker PopSocket battery pack attached

I’ve purchased one iPhone from every generation for the past 14 years — I’m no stranger to Apple and its ecosystem. Heck, I even make sure to always place an iPhone preorder to ensure I get my device on launch day (it’s become my annual tradition). Like many people, I put in my pre-order for a deep purple iPhone 14 Pro, because the Pro lineup just had too many great new features that I didn’t want to miss out on. From the whimsical Dynamic Island, the always-on display, and a 48-megapixel camera, it’s one fantastic mobile device.

But I think one of my favorite features of the iPhone 14 Pro isn’t something that’s entirely new. In fact, it’s been around for the past few years, ever since Apple launched the iPhone 12 series. While Apple has barely talked about it for the iPhone 14 series, it’s one of the features that is a serious game-changer and one that I can’t live without — MagSafe.
What is MagSafe?

Read more
Apple comes clean with what it really thinks about iPhone 14’s Dynamic Island
The iPhone 14 Pro's Dynamic Island showing music playing.

Two Apple higher-ups have spoken candidly in an interview about their thoughts on the iPhone 14 Pro and iPhone 14 Pro Max's new Dynamic Island. The new feature has been a major shakeup to the iPhone experience, and both Craig Federighi and Alan Dye — Apple's senior vice president of software engineering and vice president of human interface design, respectively — seem to know it.

In an interview with Japanese publication Axis, Federighi said that the shock and surprise seen in the audience when the Dynamic Island was initially revealed at the Apple "Far Out" showcase was "the same as when we first saw the feature inside Apple." He explains that after he was introduced to the Dynamic Island, he felt like the iPhone took on a "new, living identity."

Read more