Last July, Ars Technica took a look at the state
of the Thunderbolt standard developed by Apple and Intel, noting that adoption
remained slow amid high pricing some eighteen months after the standard's
introduction. The report did, however, suggest that pricing could begin to
improve in 2013 as the next generation of Thunderbolt chips hit the market.
Ars Technica has now published a follow-up report looking at how things have
changed over the past six months, pointing to a number of improvements such as slightly lower pricing on Thunderbolt cables from Apple, the
introduction of the first wave of optical cables supporting the standard, and the
launch of new docking stations and other peripherals taking advantage of
Thunderbolt.
The report
indicates that the biggest holdup to wider adoption of Thunderbolt appears to
be Intel's licensing and certification process, with the company dedicating
only limited resources to helping third-party vendors bring their Thunderbolt
products to market.
Several vendors
we have spoke to over the past year have claimed that Intel was holding up the
process, cherry picking which vendors it worked with.
Though Intel had
effectively denied this characterization in the past, the company explained the
situation a bit differently when we spoke at CES last week. Jason Ziller,
Director of Thunderbolt Marketing & Planning at Intel, told Ars that Intel
has "worked closely" with vendors it felt could "offer the best
products" and could meet its stringent "certification
requirements." The subtext seemed to be that Intel had limited resources
to support and certify new products, and so it gave priority to devices that
were perhaps more novel than those proposed by other makers.
Ziller indicated
that Intel would be broadening its efforts this year, suggesting that more
Thunderbolt products may be able to make their way into consumers' hands.
Combining those efforts with continued cost drops and the first moves into
Windows machines, Apple and Intel are undoubtedly hoping that 2013 will finally
see Thunderbolt turn the corner. [MacRumors]
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