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Will Intel Figure Out the Device Market?

Tickers in this article: AMZN INTC BRCM ARMH
NEW YORK (TheStreet) -- A decade ago I did an in-depth study of Intel(INTC) .

I talked to some Chinese OEMs, and asked how the company could win their business. Don't give us computer chips, they told me. Give us complete designs. Give us brands that will buy what we make and market it.

At the time, Broadcom(BRCM) was just starting to eat Intel's lunch at these OEMs. That situation hasn't really changed, even as feature phones have become smartphones and smartphones have become tablets.

As I wrote at Seeking Alpha, Intel has a device problem.

I know the company will insist that's not the case. They may point to the 20 Windows 8-based tablets that are now in the pipeline, or to the new Ultrabooks, as they did to TheVerge.

It's true that Windows 8 is going to keep Intel's results strong in the near term. As James Rogers noted recently here at TheStreet, Intel still earns eye-popping margins on its semiconductors. It still dominates in the data center and in the "enterprise" market.

I still own the 600 shares of Intel that I acquired in the 1990s, after selling on splits several times so my basis in them is zero dollars. But I'm not adding to my position.

Because just as Moore's Law holds that better-and-better gets faster-and-faster, with capabilities rising and prices falling steadily, year-after-year, the rate at which the market for devices changes is also increasing.

Here is one example: Amazon.com(AMZN) announced its Kindle Fire tablet, priced at $199, last October, but that product is now obsolete. The whole market is on watch for Amazon's next announcement, which has to include a better screen, more storage, a faster processor, a better browser and an even lower price.

Phones change even faster than tablets. Many companies refresh their product lines twice a year. Phones get announced, delivered and trashed faster than primetime comedies. The turnover is faster than for reality TV stars. (Whatever happened to Snooki, or Nokia(Nokia) for that matter?)