Intel is planning to make the Thunderbolt specification royalty-free, and include support for the protocol on its CPUs rather than on external chips:
Intel's dream of making one cable to rule them all took a huge step forward this week. On Wednesday, Intel announced it will integrate Thunderbolt 3 into future CPUs. More importantly, the company said it would open up the long-secret protocol to the world, royalty-free. The company's explanation for the change is practically utopian. "Intel's vision for Thunderbolt was not just to make a faster computer port, but a simpler and more versatile port available to everyone," wrote Chris Walker, Intel's vice president for Client Computing, in a blog post.
[...] By moving Thunderbolt onto the CPU, Intel says it can lower the cost and the power requirements. Intel didn't actually detail which CPUs would get Thunderbolt 3 or when. If it's truly coming to all of them, it would mean every PC that uses an Intel chip would get the much sought-after feature. There's no fear of a proprietary lock now, either. "In addition to Intel's (CPU integrated) Thunderbolt silicon," Walker wrote, "next year Intel plans to make the Thunderbolt protocol specification available to the industry under a nonexclusive, royalty-free license."
Here's an idea: take the Intel Management Engine off at the same time.
Also at BusinessInsider, Wired, CNET, Tom's Hardware, and Ars Technica.
(Score: 1) by Frost on Saturday May 27 2017, @07:25PM (1 child)
His failure was not using hindsight, like you are now. It's by far the best way to predict the past.
(Score: 2) by Grishnakh on Sunday May 28 2017, @01:18AM
It's not hindsight. The Beta vs. VHS format wars came *long* before Firewire, and there were plenty of other examples of consumers generally preferring the alternatives that cost less.