Last week, we saw a report on cnet making claims that Apple’s iPhone 4 is powered by the same device as the Samsung Wave S8500. The renowned A4 chip is manufactured by Samsung – it makes sense that it might appear in a Samsung device. 6ab9_ipad-a4-100127 What many North Americans don’t know is that Samsung is a massive company – much larger than they might think. Samsung plays in semiconductor design, manufacturing, consumer electronics, appliances, and even automotive (i.e., They make cars). From personal experience, the various divisions have difficulty working together. The concept of a Samsung device having a Samsung core is slightly less likely than you probably thought. R&D costs on a chip such as the A4 are bound to be quite high. Have you ever seen a chip that you weren’t able to ID on Samsung’s website? Chances are it has proprietary claims – much like “Apple’s A4”. Well, today Dr. Wreck has news for you – semiconductor manufacturers often resell or repackage bare die in an effort to extend a device’s life-expectancy or even functional base. That means you might find yourself purchasing a crippled or often repackaged device for your next design application. This is often done by rotating the die 90 degrees inside of the package – which modifies the pin-out. What is the device actually called? The S5PC110A01. It’s no wonder Apple, the king of branding in all things electronic, decided on something simple and sexy like the A4. This news is really no surprise – that said, the iPhone is about the only smartphone anyone should really consider building proprietary devices for (sales volumes are high enough to support R&D and tapeout). Technical Specifications at a glance:
  • PowerVR SGX 535 3D Graphics core
  • 1 GHz Cortex-A8 (iPad)
  • L1 cache – 64KB
  • L2 cache – 640KB
  • PoP – 2x 128MB DDR SDRAM chips, 64-bit data bus
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