Cellular chipsets are the semiconductor engines that enable every mobile phone to connect to one another, so consequently, the stunning growth in mobile phones to over 1.1 billion last year has provided an equally stunning rise in the cellular chipset market. Increasingly, a greater percentage of cellular chipsets are being used in non-mobile phone applications, such as mobile computing (notebooks, netbooks), industrial/machine-to-machine (M2M), automotive, health/medical, and consumer devices (eReaders, MIDs, gaming devices). While the portion of worldwide cellular chipsets used for these applications is currently small compared with the more than one billion unit mobile phone market, this study forecasts significant growth in these cellular broadband applications through 2014.
Cellular broadband chipsets can provide the all-important data connectivity to other devices, especially to the Internet, that consumers are increasingly demanding as they migrate from fixed/wired devices to mobile/handheld devices. There is strong appeal for real-time data connectivity and access not only in traditional computing devices like notebooks, but also in a number of emerging markets such as medical/health monitoring, industrial/M2M, as well as a growing array of consumer products such as eReaders.
Key findings from this market outlook include:
Details of the new report, table of contents and ordering information can be found on Electronics.ca Publications' web site. View the report: Worldwide Cellular Broadband Chipset 2009-2014 Forecast and Analysis.