Intel’s 64-bit Bay Trail chip coming to an Android tablet near you in the second quarter

BY Stefan Constantinescu

Published 20 Jan 2014

Ever since Apple announced the iPhone 5s last year and with it the 64-bit A7 chip, nerds around the world have been red in the face, screaming at chipset makers and Google to launch a 64-bit version of Android and the silicon required to run it. According to Intel CEO Brian Krzanich, Intel’s 64-bit enabled Bay Trail chip will be on the market, in Android tablets, during the second quarter of this year.

Translation: Any time between April and June.

Taking a step back, is this whole 64-bit issue a chicken and egg problem? In other words, does Google not want to launch a 64-bit of Android until phones are out there with 64-bit chips inside? While I can’t speak for either of these companies, I will say that 32-bit code will run just fine on 64-bit chips. In fact, the ARMv8 architecture that supports 64-bit code has been tweaked in such a way that it’ll run 32-bit code even better than today’s 32-bit chips.

If I had to make a prediction, I’d say that by this time next year, it’ll be damn near impossible to even buy a 32-bit smartphone. Flagship phones will use whatever Qualcomm has out. Mid-range phones will likely have a MediaTek chip that uses ARM’s Cortex A57 or A53. And low-end phones will have two to four Cortex A53 cores in them.

As for Google, expect 64-bit news at I/O 2014 this spring. Whether they make just the Android kernel 64-bit or the entire Android stack 64-bit is irrelevant, the company just needs a talking point so they can appear to be competitive.