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London, UK (SPX) Jun 10, 2008 Semiconductor vendors that pioneered the GPS market may face an uncertain future, according to ABI Research, and might best ensure their continued ability to innovate by being absorbed into much larger IC manufacturers. "The market for GPS semiconductors has reached a plateau," says principal analyst Dominique Bonte. "All GPS chips offer similar performance. That tends to make market success primarily a matter of price, and of ease of integration with the host devices." At the same time there is a growing trend towards integrating GPS with other functions in a single chip. Bluetooth is the most popular initial candidate, and holds the key to the immense global wireless handset market that is critical to expanding navigation and location based services markets. "CSR recently announced the launch of BlueCore7, the first solution integrating Bluetooth, GPS and FM on a single chip," says Bonte. "BlueCore7 will be in volume production from Q4 2008 and more launches from other vendors are expected in 2009. Bluetooth manufacturers are already buying up smaller, independent GPS chipmakers in order to integrate their expertise into the larger Bluetooth market. And Wi-Fi is next on the list for integration." Both these trends mean that the very large semiconductor players will ultimately take the lead in this market. They have the facilities to churn GPS ICs out in great quantities, reducing their cost. They also have greater abilities to integrate multiple RF technologies in a single unit. "We expect to see Broadcom, Atheros, NXP and Texas Instruments becoming more important as GPS chipset providers," Bonte notes. "The future of GPS-only chipset providers may prove limited, and companies such as SiRF, that pioneered this market, may need to be acquired, for their technologies to continue." Other factors that may soon affect markets for positioning system ICs are the deployment of Block III GPS satellites, which will offer better indoor coverage for location based services, and the possibility of dual-constellation (GPS-GLONASS/Galileo) ICs that would mean improved visibility and positioning accuracy. Related Links ABI Research GPS Applications, Technology and Suppliers
![]() ![]() Worldwide shipments of GPS-integrated mobile devices will grow at an annualized rate of nearly 40% over the next five years, reaching 834 million units in 2012, according to Parks Associates' new report GPS: A Path to New Applications on Mobile Devices. |
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