That said, Tegra was supposed to compensate for the shrinkage of the discrete graphics market under the influence of much better integrated graphics.
No, Tegra was created to address the advent and growth of low power mobile computing devices such as smartphones and tablets.
Worse, Tegra 4 appears to be much less successful than Tegra 3, since the only design win I'm aware of is one ZTE phone which may or may not actually make it to market.
NVIDIA claims that Tegra 4 already has more design wins than Tegra 3, and that there is much interest in Tegra 4i. Considering that Tegra 4/4i/i500 only started sampling relatively recently, it is no surprise that design wins haven't been announced yet. With 4G LTE-equipped tablets and smartphones in particular, there is a six month lag between carrier certification and device production.
Tegra 3 was in the Google Nexus, but apparently NVIDIA's out of that. It was also in the Surface RT, but I think JH Huang's recent comments about Windows RT being a disappointment pretty clearly point to Tegra 4 being out of the next Surface RT tablet, if such a tablet is indeed planned.
The Nexus 7 still seems to be selling reasonably well with Tegra 3, so why would Google rush to replace it? In my opinion, it would make more sense to offer a higher performance and higher priced variant (say, Nexus 7.7 or Nexus 8). Tegra 4 isn't production ready yet, so if Google needs something now, then they will need to go with S4 Pro or S600. This isn't the end of the world for NVIDIA, because product cycles come and go every 6-9 months. NVIDIA will be ready and waiting for the next refresh.
As for the comments about Windows RT, he never said that the operating system or the idea of creating a Windows on ARM operating system was bad, he simply said that sales of the RT tablets were disappointing. He said the exact same thing about Android one or two years ago, and now his view and outlook on Android have completely changed as the Android OS and ecosystem have evolved and grown. NVIDIA's partnership with Microsoft is absolutely critical in helping to ensure that Windows on ARM evolves and grows in the future, so don't construe short-term disappointment as a sign that NVIDIA would abandon this OS and this ecosystem in any way.
Generally speaking, NVIDIA is not a very large company, and Tegra is only about 20% of its business. Under such circumstances, competing against the much larger, and very much Snapdragon-focused Qualcomm is not going to get any easier.
All of a sudden, a company with more than 7000 employees is considered "not a very large company"? Right. NVIDIA has significantly more experience in visual computing than Qualcomm, while Qualcomm has significantly more experience in mobile computing than NVIDIA, but these two companies are moving more and more towards convergence. These are both fabless semiconductor companies too. Qualcomm currently has a large advantage in the smartphone space, while NVIDIA currently has a large advantage in the tablet space. The main piece of the puzzle that NVIDIA was missing to take advantage of the growth in the smartphone space was a 4G LTE baseband modem, and that will be resolved in the very near future.
In the short term, NVIDIA should do OK. In the long term, they might make enough money in pro graphics and fancy cloud stuff, but honestly I don't expect NVIDIA to still be around 10 years from now, maybe even not that much.
No need to promote FUD. NVIDIA is currently very well positioned to take advantage of the growth in mobile computing devices, and it appears that NVIDIA is investing more in Tegra and GPU businesses now than ever before. There are very very few companies on the face of the earth that possess the hardware and software technology to create very low power fully custom SoC's with CPU, GPU, and 4G LTE baseband modem all integrated on the SoC die.
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