A very brief presentation (35 mins) advising the commercial investors (investment houses, hedge fund managers, etc...) of Bank of America Securities on the issues facing Intel in the COVID-19 recession and its competitive environment. Before the presentation, I was asked to answer 3 main questions...
1. My opinion on INTC – how did it manage to lose its strong grip on its dominant market share? What caused the continuous delays in its manufacturing advancement and allowed the likes of TSMC to catch up to them?
2. My view on the future strategic direction that INTC should be taking – especially important for BofA clients – what is INTC likely to do in terms of outsourcing its manufacturing? How would the new CEO impact INTC’s future direction?
3. Bigger picture – Has the IDM business model run its course with the rise of fabless companies (AMD, NVDA, QCOM, etc) and system companies (AAPL, Google, AMZN) partnering with foundries (TSMC, and Samsung) and IP providers (ARM)
Apple has recently submitted a new patent application that uses Blockchain within a prospective system for creating and verifying timestamps. Based on the public application to US Patent and Trademark Office on Thursday where Blockchain technology was used to certify timestamps as a program combined with Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) tools. Apple's application describes three possible methods for establishing timestamps, with one of these scenarios centering on a Blockchain platform. There is a use case in question where data stored involves tying a piece of information to a particular transaction on a Blockchain, establishing the state of that data at a particular point in time.
The program would generate a block containing a timestamp, with every subsequent block being added as miners verify each transaction conducted on the chain. This system is part of what Apple is calling a "multi-check architecture," meaning that another system would confirm the timestamp after the block is generated but before it is added to the chain. Like other established institutions, Apple believes in the power of Blockchain technology and its benefits. Apple has seen the benefits of how the transactions are verified and approved by consensus among participants in the network, making fraud more difficult. The technology operates on a distributed rather than centralized platform, with each participant having access to exactly the same ledger records, allowing participants to enter or leave at will and providing resilience against attacks.