Intel’s Network and Edge Business Struggles

August 4, 2023

Intel’s network and edge group has seen significant growth in recent years, but sales plummeted by a third to less than $2.9 billion, resulting in a $487 million loss. Intel attributed this decline to customers reducing purchases to adjust to lower demand across product lines.

Competition from advanced silicon, like Nvidia’s GPUs, poses a threat to Intel’s edge business. Demand for GPUs has surged, driving Nvidia’s share price up 227% since the start of the year. Despite these setbacks, it’s unclear if Intel achieved its 40% market capture goal in 2022.

Nokia also faced difficulties when Intel missed delivery targets for 10-nanometer chips designed for their initial 5G products, temporarily disrupting their 5G strategy. Meanwhile, Intel’s relationship with Ericsson is expanding, with future plans to manufacture customized 5G chips using their next-generation processes.

Intel boasts a 99% share of virtual RAN deployments, however, the market for open and virtual RAN products has not taken off as quickly as expected. Dell’Oro predicts a 13% shrinkage in the RAN market in North America this year, impacting Ericsson and Nokia’s profitability.

The sources for this piece include an article in DataCenterKnowledge.

Top Stories

Related Articles

April 23, 2026 Rogers Communications has launched a new $95 per month wireless plan offering unlimited data across 64 international more...

April 23, 2026 SpaceX has partnered with AI coding startup Cursor, giving the firm access to large-scale computing infrastructure to more...

April 23, 2026 Shared Services Canada is abandoning desk “hoteling” for employees in the National Capital Region as it prepares more...

April 22, 2026 Meta Platforms is facing a class action lawsuit in Washington, D.C., alleging the company knowingly profited from more...

Jim Love

Jim is an author and podcast host with over 40 years in technology.

Share:
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn