MediaTek

MediaTek, Inc.
聯發科
Native name
聯發科技股份有限公司
Public
Traded as TWSE: 2454
Industry Fabless semiconductors
Founded May 28, 1997 (1997-05-28)
Headquarters Hsinchu, Taiwan
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
  • Ming-Kai Tsai (Chairman & CEO)
  • Jyh-Jer Cho (Vice Chairman)
  • Ching-Jiang Hsieh (President)[1]
Products MT6589, MT8125, MT6572, MT6582, MT6592, MT6577 and many others
Production output
220 million smartphone chip solutions (2013)[2]
Services
  • Chip sales
  • System engineering and reference designs
Revenue Increase NT$136,056 million (US$4,500 million) (2013)[3]
Increase NT$27,485 million (US$920 million) (2013)[3]
Number of employees
7,000 (2012)[4]
Website mediatek.com

MediaTek Inc. (Chinese: 聯發科技股份有限公司; pinyin: Liánfā Kējì Gǔfèn Yǒuxiàn Gōngsī) is a Taiwanese fabless semiconductor company that provides system-on-chip solutions for wireless communications, HDTV, DVD and Blu-ray.[5] Headquartered in Hsinchu, Taiwan, the company has 25 offices worldwide and was the 4th largest IC designer worldwide in 2013.[6][7] Since its founding in 1997, MediaTek has been creating chipset solutions for the global market.[4][8][9] MediaTek also provides its customers with reference designs.[10]

Corporate History

MediaTek was originally a unit of United Microelectronics Corporation (UMC) tasked with designing chipsets for home entertainment products.[8] On May 28, 1997, the unit was spun off and incorporated. MediaTek Inc. was listed on the Taiwan Stock Exchange (TSEC) under the "2454" code on July 23, 2001.[11]

The company started out designing chipsets for optical drives and subsequently expanded into chip solutions for DVD players, digital TVs, mobile phones, smartphones and tablets.[8][10][12] In general MediaTek has had a strong record of gaining market share and displacing competitors after entering new markets.[10][13][14]

The company's division designing solutions for mobile devices was launched in 2004. Seven years later, it was taking orders for more than 500 million mobile system-on-chip units per annum, which included solutions for both feature phones and smart devices.[8] By providing extensive system engineering assistance the company allowed many smaller companies and new entrants to enter a mobile phone market that had previously been dominated by large, often vertically integrated corporations that had long been broadly entrenched in the telecommunications industry. The mobile chip market quickly became the main growth driver for the company.[8][10][13][14]

At Mobile World Congress 2014, MediaTek unveiled its new brand “Everyday Genius”, dubbing the term “Super-mid market”, with the vision and aiming to make smartphones more accessible affordable to the wider market.[15]

As of November 2014, over 1500 mobile models accounting for 700 million units were shipped globally in 2014, using MediaTek chips, and the company posted revenues of US$5.3 billion in the first half of 2014, nearly as much as the whole of 2013.[16] The revenue growth was however partly due to revenue recognition from the acquisition of MStar which became effective at the beginning of 2014.[17]

Acquisitions

InProComm

In 2005, MediaTek acquired Inprocomm, a wireless semiconductor design firm producing 802.11a, b and a/g chips.[18]

Analog Devices cellular chip operations

In 2007, MediaTek acquired the cellular chip operations of Analog Devices for US$350 million.[19]

Ralink

On May 5, 2011, MediaTek acquired Ralink Technology Corporation,[20] gaining products and expertise for Wi-Fi technology for mobile and non-mobile applications, as well as for wired DSL and Ethernet connectivity.

Coresonic

On April 11, 2012, MediaTek acquired Coresonic, a global producer of digital signal processing solutions based in Linköping, Sweden. Coresonic is now a wholly owned subsidiary of MediaTek in Europe.[21]

MStar

On June 22, 2012, MediaTek announced that it would acquire rival Taiwanese chipset designer MStar Semiconductor Inc., which held a strong market share position in digital television chips. The initial phase of the deal will see MediaTek taking a 48 percent stake, with an option to purchase the remaining stake at a later date.[22]

The merger between MediaTek and MStar was delayed by antitrust concerns of China and South Korea and finally finalized on February 1, 2014.[23]

Financial performance

Yearly net sales and operating income in million NT$[24]
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Net sales 52,942 74,779 68,016 77,311 71,988 53,842 99,263 136,056 213,063[lower-alpha 1]
Income from operations 23,816 31,427 17,090 21,447 17,267 4,840 12,403 25,244 47,241
  1. Includes sales contribution from MStar acquisition

MediaTek's financial results have been subject to variation as the financial success of different product lines fluctuated. MediaTek's relatively strong sales in 2009/2010 was based on its strong market position for feature phone chipsets. Smartphone and tablet solutions contributed to MediaTek's sales and income increase in 2013,[25] while revenue recognition from the acquisition of MStar Semiconductor, which became effective in February 2014, as well as a continuing strong position for smartphone and tablet solutions, are the main reasons for the sales growth seen in 2014.[26]

MediaTek's stock has been trading on the Taiwan Stock Exchange under the symbol TWSE: 2454. In its early days, the stock peaked at NT$783 (the all-time high) in April 2002, and later saw a peak of NT$656 in March 2007. The lowest price in the period starting from 2001 was reached in January 2005, with a stock price of NT$171. In more recent times, the stock peaked at NT$590 in January 2010, and saw a low point in August 2011 at NT$221. The stock price saw its highest level since 2010 at NT$545 on July 3, 2014.[27][28] The stock price then declined to a low near NT$400 in October 2014 before recovering to a price of NT$488 as of January 8, 2015, representing a market capitalization of approximately NT$770 billion (US$25 billion), based on 1,571 million shares outstanding.[29][30]

Innovations

Heterogeneous multi-processing

With the announcement and sampling of its MT8135 system-on-chip (SoC) for tablets in July, 2013, MediaTek became the world’s first company to demonstrate ARM big.LITTLE chipsets with heterogeneous multi-processing capabilities.[31][32] By concurrently allocating tasks to individual CPU cores, the MT8135 could in theory offer significant power saving advantages over competing mobile device solutions.[31] A variant of the MT8135 was used by Amazon in new Kindle Fire HD tablet models in the second half of 2014.[33]

MediaTek announced the high-end MT6595 platform for smartphones in February 2014. The MT6595 is an octa-core SoC in a big.LITTLE configuration with LTE network connectivity powered by four Cortex-A17 cores and four Cortex-A7 cores with heterogeneous multi-processing capabilities.[34][35] This chip became commercially available in devices in the second half of 2014.[36] In July 2014, MediaTek announced a new product targeting the high-end, with a feature set largely similar to the MT6595, but instead of a heterogeneous multi-processing architecture, the MT6795 features eight symmetrical 64-bit Cortex-A53 cores in a true octa-core configuration.[37]

"True Octa-core" trademark

In July 2013, MediaTek became the first system-on-chip (SoC) supplier to announce the development of an octa-core mobile device SoC capable of processing tasks with eight CPU cores concurrently, a solution the company refers to as "True Octa-Core".[38] On November 20, 2013, in a press event held in Beijing MediaTek officially announced the MT6592 SoC. It's a 'true octa core' chip with eight ARM Cortex-A7 application processor clocked up to 1.7–2.0 GHz and Mali-450 MP4 GPU clocked at 700 MHz. There is no on-board LTE modem but it includes NFC radio. It also supports UltraHD or 4K video playback.

MediaTek has subsequently introduced additional products using a "true octa-core" CPU configuration using Cortex-A53 cores, with support for ARM's 64-bit ARMv8-A architecture, including the MT6752 clocked at 1.7 GHz and the high-end MT6795 clocked up to 2.2 GHz. Devices using the MT6795 were expected to be commercially available by the end of 2014.[37]

Multimode inductive and resonance wireless charging

On January 7, 2014, MediaTek announced its successful development of multimode receiver technology that is compatible with inductive and resonant charging – two of the common wireless charging technologies – the first in the wireless charger industry in enabling multimode charging.[39]

On February 24, 2014, MediaTek announced its MT3188, its first multimode wireless charging product, certified by the Power Matters Alliance and Wireless Power Consortium.[40]

Five-in-one combo wireless connectivity SoC

On February 25, 2014, MediaTek announced the industry first five-in-one combo wireless SoC MT6630 that supports a range of connectivity standards such as 802.11a/b/g/n/ac, advanced Wi-Fi Direct and Miracast support, Bluetooth 4.1, ANT+, tri-band GPS and FM transceiver.[41][42]

UltraHD TV platform for Android TV

At the Consumer Electronics Show in January 2015, MediaTek announced its collaboration with Google on the world’s first Ultra HD TV platform solution for Android TV, the MT5595, a new digital television SoC.[43] It has been adopted by Sony for new LCD TV models.[44]

Product categories

MediaTek delivers solutions across the mobile communications, home entertainment and connectivity fields. Applications for MediaTek chips include smartphones and feature phones, tablets, digital televisions such as LCD TVs, DVD and Blu-ray players, optical drives used in PCs, Wi-Fi routers and other devices featuring wireless connectivity (GPS, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and NFC), ADSL equipment, and smart home appliances.[45][46] Its chipsets are divided into the following product categories:[45]

Markets and competition

Competitors and market share
SoC Application Historical competitors Competitors (2014) Market share
Optical storage Oak Technologies,[47] VIA[48] Sunext Technology[49] #1 (2012)[13]
DVD/Blu-ray player ESS Technology, Zoran,[50] Renesas/NEC,[51] Broadcom[52][53] Sunplus[52] #1 (2012)[13]
DTV Genesis Microchip, Trident Microsystems, ATI/AMD,[54] Zoran,[55] Broadcom,[53] MStar Semiconductor Realtek, Novatek, Sunplus, Sigma Designs, Marvell, Qualcomm, Samsung Semiconductor, LG[56][57][58] 20% (#1) by units (Q2 2008),[55] 57% by revenue including MStar (2011)[59]
Feature phone Texas Instruments, Analog Devices,[60] Qualcomm Spreadtrum, RDA Microelectronics[60][61][lower-alpha 1]
Smartphone Qualcomm, Spreadtrum,[10] Marvell,[62] Intel,[63] HiSilicon,[64] Leadcore Technology,[65] Broadcom, NVIDIA,[lower-alpha 2] Apple Inc., Samsung Electronics Application Processor: 10% (#3) by revenue (2013),[66] Baseband processor: 12% (#2) by revenue (2013)[67]
Mobile phone (combined) Baseband units: 27% (#2) (2013),[68] Baseband/AP: 14% (#2) by revenue (2013)[68]
Tablet Rockchip, Allwinner Technology, Actions Semiconductor,[69] Spreadtrum,[70] Intel,[63] Qualcomm, NVIDIA, Marvell Unit shipments in China: #2 (Q2 2014)[71]

The application focus of MediaTek's chip sales has shifted and expanded over time in an evolving competitive landscape. In its early days, when optical storage products were prominent it competed with Oak Technologies[47] and others. When it expanded to DVD player chips it successfully competed against companies such as ESS Technology, Zoran[50] and later Sunplus.[52] In the market for DTV chip solutions it helped displace early leaders such as Genesis Microchip and Trident Microsystems[72] while competing with Zoran[55] and MStar Semiconductor, also based in Taiwan, which it later acquired.[22]

MediaTek's revenue product mix in 2014, consisted of approximately 50–55% smartphone chip solutions, 25–30% digital home solutions (which includes DTV chips), 5–10% tablet chip solutions, 5–10% feature phone chip solutions and 5–10% Wi-Fi solutions.[73]

In the market for chip solutions for smartphones, the company primarily competes with Qualcomm, Spreadtrum, HiSilicon, Marvell and Samsung Electronics.[65][66][67] Qualcomm is the dominant global player in the mid and high-end segments,[66] and uses its considerable intellectual property leverage to pursue significant licensing fees based on the wholesale price of 3G/4G mobile phones, leading authorities in China to charge Qualcomm with abusing its "dominant position in the market" and start anti-trust investigations in 2014.[74] In February 2015, Qualcomm announced that had it reached a resolution with Chinese authorities regarding the investigation.[75] Spreadtrum is a significant player in the low-end of the Chinese market.[76] In 2013, MediaTek held a smartphone baseband unit market share of 55% at Chinese OEMs.[68] Intel Corporation has made significant investments into becoming a player in this segment and was already heavily subsidizing its entry into the low-cost tablet market as of 2014.[63]

According to information provided in MediaTek's Q1 2014 financial results conference call, in terms of product mix, MediaTek's smartphone chipset shipments consisted of 5-10% single-core, 45-55% dual-core, 30-35% quad-core and 5-10% octa-core. Most octa-cores were sold in China, while the export market (chips sold directly to manufacturers in countries such as India) was dominated by dual-core. In terms of baseband technology (smartphones only), WCDMA was 50-55%, TD 25-30% and EDGE 10-15%.[77] According to MediaTek's Q3 2014 conference call, dual-core shipments for entry-level devices continued to be important in the second half of 2014 with an increase in export shipments as MediaTek's competitiveness China was affected by the transition to 4G.[26]

MediaTek started shipping SoC solutions with integrated 4G LTE baseband in volume in the second half of 2014, which was later than Qualcomm, which had been shipping SoCs with integrated 4G for some time,[78] which was likely to impact MediaTek as Chinese telecom providers such as China Mobile and carriers in other countries push and subsidize LTE technology.[79] Although MediaTek's MT6290 stand-alone 4G baseband combined with its MT6582 or MT6592 SoCs is less profitable for MediaTek than a single-chip 4G solution would be, as of mid-2014 they have been adopted in some models by large manufacturers.[80][81] However, the first generation of new affordable 4G smartphone models from large MediaTek clients such as Alcatel One Touch and ZTE use Qualcomm's Snapdragon 400 and 410 platforms with integrated 4G baseband.[82][83] MediaTek has indicated that chips with 4G were expected to make up 20% of shipments in Q4 2014, with a significant increase expected for 2015,[84] which will also see improvements to its product mix as new 4G chips allow it to target higher market segments.[26]

However, MediaTek's sales performance in the first quarter of 2015 was lower than expected, which according to industry watchers is due to lower than expected handset demand in China and emerging markets. Although MediaTek is expected to see sequential sales growth in Q2 2015, it comes off a low base in Q1 2015 and will not allow MediaTek's sales performance to match that of 2014.[85] According to DigiTimes, MediaTek has lost ground to Qualcomm with respect to Chinese smartphone production in 2015.[86]

  1. Both Spreadtrum and RDA Microelectronics were acquired by Tsinghua Unigroup in 2014, into which Intel has subsequently made a large investment.
  2. Both Broadcom and NVIDIA announced in 2014, that they are exiting or no longer focusing on the smartphone SoC market.

Product list

Smartphone processors

2009–12

List of devices using Mediatek SoCs#ARMv5

Model Number CPU (ISA) fab CPU CPU cache GPU Memory technology Wireless radio technologies Released
MT6235 ARM9 Up to 208 MHz No GPU Feature phone SoC
MT6516 ARM9 (ARMv5) 416 MHz No GPU Not 3G compatible 2009
MT6513 ARM11 (ARMv6) 65 nm 650 MHz PowerVR SGX531 @ 281 MHz[87] Not 3G compatible (MT6573 without 3G)
MT6573 ARM11 (ARMv6) 65 nm 650 MHz PowerVR SGX531 3G, HSPA 2010
MT6515 Cortex-A9 (ARMv7) 40 nm 1.0 GHz PowerVR SGX531 Ultra @ 522 MHz[87] Not 3G compatible (MT6575 without 3G) 2012
MT6575 Cortex-A9 (ARMv7), 512 KB L2 cache 40 nm 1.0 GHz PowerVR SGX531 Ultra @ 522 MHz[87] 3G, HSPA 2011
MT6575M Cortex-A9 (ARMv7), 256 KB L2 cache 65 nm 1.0 GHz PowerVR SGX531 Ultra @ 281 MHz[87] 3G, HSPA 2012
MT6577 Cortex-A9 (ARMv7) 40 nm 1.0 GHz dual-core PowerVR SGX531 Ultra @ 522 MHz[87] 3G, HSPA, HSPA+ 2012
MT6577T Cortex-A9 (ARMv7) 40 nm 1.2 GHz dual-core PowerVR SGX531 Ultra @ 522 MHz 3G, HSPA, HSPA+
MT6517 Cortex-A9 (ARMv7) 40 nm 1.0 GHz dual-core PowerVR SGX531 Ultra @ 522 MHz Not 3G compatible (MT6577 with 3G) 2012
MT6517T Cortex-A9 (ARMv7) 40 nm 1.2 GHz dual-core PowerVR SGX531 Ultra @ 525 MHz[87] Not 3G compatible (MT6577T with 3G)

2013 and later (ARMv7)

Dual-core

List of devices using Mediatek SoCs#ARMv7 Dual Core

Model number CPU ISA fab CPU CPU cache GPU Memory technology Wireless radio technologies Released
MT6572 ARMv7 28 nm Up to 1.2 GHz dual-core ARM Cortex-A7 32 KB L1, 256 KB L2 Mali-400 MP1 @ 500 MHz[87] LPDDR2 266 MHz Multi-mode Rel. 8 HSPA+/TD-SCDMA, Wi-Fi, FM, Bluetooth, GPS[88] June 2013
MT6572M ARMv7 28 nm 1.0 GHz (typical) dual-core ARM Cortex-A7 32 KB L1, 256 KB L2 Mali-400 MP1 @ 400 MHz[87] GSM/EDGE (2G), Multi-mode Rel. 8 HSPA+/TD-SCDMA (3G), Wi-Fi, FM, Bluetooth, GPS 2014
MT6571 ARMv7 28 nm 1.3 GHz dual-core ARM Cortex-A7 Mali-400 MP1 GSM/EDGE (2G), Wi-Fi, FM, Bluetooth, GPS Q3 2014
Quad-core

List of devices using Mediatek SoCs#ARMv7 Quad Core

Model number CPU ISA fab CPU CPU cache GPU Memory technology Wireless radio technologies Released
MT6589[lower-alpha 1] ARMv7 28 nm Up to 1.2 GHz Quad-core ARM Cortex-A7 32 KB L1, 1 MB L2 PowerVR SGX544MP @ 286 MHz[87][89] 32-bit single-channel 533 MHz LPDDR2 (4.3 GB/s) 3G, HSPA+, TD-SCDMA March 2013
MT6589M Up to 1.2 GHz quad-core Cortex-A7 PowerVR SGX544MP @ 156 MHz[87][89] LPDDR2/LPDDR3 3G, HSPA+, TD-SCDMA July 2013
MT6589T Up to 1.5 GHz quad-core ARM Cortex-A7 32 KB L1, 1 MB L2 PowerVR SGX544MP @ 357 MHz[87][89] LPDDR1/LPDDR2 3G, HSPA+, TD-SCDMA July 2013
MT6580[90] Up to 1.3 GHz quad-core ARM Cortex-A7 32 KB L1, 512 KB L2 Mali-400 MP1 @ 400 MHz 32-bit single-channel 533 MHz LPDDR2/LPDDR3 (4.3 GB/s) R8 HSPA+/TD-SCDMA, Wi-Fi, FM, Bluetooth, GPS 2015
MT6582 Mali-400 MP2 @ 500 MHz[87] R8 HSPA+/TD-SCDMA, Wi-Fi, FM, Bluetooth, GPS Q3 2013
MT6582M Mali-400 MP2 @ 416 MHz R8 HSPA+/TD-SCDMA, Wi-Fi, FM, Bluetooth, GPS Q1 2014
MT6588 Up to 1.7 GHz quad-core ARM Cortex-A7 32 KB L1, 512 KB L2 Mali-450 MP4 @ 600 MHz LPDDR2 533 MHz, LPDDR3 666 MHz R8 HSPA+/TD-SCDMA, Wi-Fi, FM, Bluetooth, GPS Q4 2013
  1. previously known as MT6588
Hexa-core, octa-core and deca-core

List of devices using Mediatek SoCs#ARMv7 Hexa Core

Model number CPU ISA fab CPU CPU cache GPU Memory technology Wireless radio technologies Released
MT6592[91] ARMv7 28 nm HPM Up to 2 GHz (typically 1.7 GHz) octa-core ARM Cortex-A7 32 KB L1, 1 MB L2 Mali-450 MP4 @ 700 MHz[87] Single-channel 32-bit LPDDR2 533 MHz, LPDDR3 666 MHz (5.3 GB/s)[92] R8 HSPA+/TD-SCDMA, Wi-Fi, FM, Bluetooth, GPS[lower-alpha 1] Q4 2013
MT6592M[93] 1.4 GHz octa-core ARM Cortex-A7 32 KB L1, 1 MB L2 Mali-450 MP4 @ 600 MHz[87] 2014
MT6591 Up to 1.5 GHz hexa-core ARM Cortex-A7 Mali-450 MP4 @ 700 MHz[87] Single-channel 32-bit LPDDR2, LPDDR3 GSM, GPRS, UMTS, HSPA+, HSUPA, TD-SCDMA Q1 2014
MT6595 ARMv7 2.1–2.2 GHz quad-core Cortex-A17 and 1.7 GHz quad-core Cortex-A7 (ARM big.LITTLE with GTS) 32 KB L1, 2 MB L2 PowerVR 6200 (Rogue, 2 clusters) @ 600 MHz[87] 32-bit dual-channel 933 MHz LPDDR3 (14.9 GB/sec) WCDMA, TD-SCDMA, GSM, FDD/TDD-LTE, CMCC 3G, CMCC 4G and TD-LTE[94] Q1 2014
MT6595M[95] 2.0 GHz quad-core ARM Cortex-A17 and 1.5 GHz quad-core ARM Cortex-A7 (ARM big.LITTLE with GTS) 32 KB L1, 2 MB L2 PowerVR 6200 (Rogue, 2 clusters) @ 450 MHz WCDMA, TD-SCDMA, GSM, FDD/TDD-LTE, CMCC 3G, CMCC 4G and TD-LTE Q1 2014
MT6595 Turbo[95] 2.4–2.5 GHz quad-core ARM Cortex-A17 and 1.7 GHz quad-core ARM Cortex-A7 (ARM big.LITTLE with GTS) 32 KB L1, 2 MB L2 PowerVR 6200 (Rogue, 2 clusters) @ 600 MHz[87] WCDMA, TD-SCDMA, GSM, FDD/TDD-LTE, CMCC 3G, CMCC 4G and TD-LTE Q1 2014
  1. Although MediaTek advertises the MT6592 platform as supporting LTE (4G), the modem inside the MT6592 chip itself does not support LTE.

ARMv8

Quad-core

List of devices using Mediatek SoCs#ARMv8 Quad Core

Model number CPU ISA fab CPU GPU Memory technology Wireless radio technologies Released
MT6732[96] ARMv8-A (64-bit) 28 nm HPM 1.5 GHz quad-core ARM Cortex-A53 Mali-T760 MP2 @ 500 MHz[87] 32-bit single-channel 800 MHz LPDDR3 (6.4 GB/sec) GSM, UMTS, GPRS, HSPA+, HSUPA, TD-SCDMA, LTE Cat 4 Q3 2014
MT6732M[96] ARMv8-A (64-bit) 28 nm HPM 1.3 GHz quad-core ARM Cortex-A53 Mali-T760 MP2 @ 500? MHz[87] 32-bit single-channel 800 MHz LPDDR3 (6.4 GB/sec) GSM, UMTS, GPRS, HSPA+, HSUPA, TD-SCDMA, LTE Cat 4 Q3 2014
MT6735[96][97] ARMv8-A (64-bit) 28 nm HPM 1.3 GHz quad-core ARM Cortex-A53 Mali-T720 MP2 @ 600 MHz[98] 32-bit single-channel 640 MHz LPDDR3 (6.4 GB/sec) GSM, UMTS, GPRS, HSPA+, HSUPA, TD-SCDMA, EVDO, LTE Cat 4 Q2 2015
MT6735P / MT6735M[96][97] ARMv8-A (64-bit) 28 nm (HPM ?) 1.0 GHz quad-core ARM Cortex-A53 Mali-T720 MP2 @ 400(P)/500(M) MHz[98] 32-bit single-channel 533 MHz LPDDR3 (6.4 GB/sec) GSM, UMTS, GPRS, HSPA+, HSUPA, TD-SCDMA, EVDO, LTE Cat 4 Q2 2015
MT6737[96][97] ARMv8-A (64-bit) 28 nm 1.1-1.3 GHz quad-core ARM Cortex-A53 Mali-T720 MP2 @ 550-650 MHz[99] 32-bit single-channel 640 MHz LPDDR2/3 up to 3GB GSM, UMTS, GPRS, HSPA+, HSUPA, TD-SCDMA, EVDO, LTE Cat 4 VoLTE Q2 2016
MT6737T[96][97] ARMv8-A (64-bit) 28 nm 1.5 GHz quad-core ARM Cortex-A53 Mali-T720 MP2 @ 600 MHz[98] 32-bit single-channel 733 MHz LPDDR2/3 up to 3GB GSM, UMTS, GPRS, HSPA+, HSUPA, TD-SCDMA, EVDO, LTE Cat 4 VoLTE Q2 2016
MT6738[96][97] ARMv8-A (64-bit) 28 nm (HPM ?) 1.5 GHz quad-core ARM Cortex-A53 Mali-T860 MP2 @ 350 MHz[98] 32-bit single-channel 666 MHz LPDDR3 up to 4GB GSM, UMTS, GPRS, HSPA+, HSUPA, TD-SCDMA, EVDO, LTE Cat 4 2016
MT6738T[96][97] ARMv8-A (64-bit) 28 nm (HPM ?) 1.5 GHz quad-core ARM Cortex-A53 Mali-T860 MP2 @ 520 MHz[98] 32-bit single-channel 666 MHz LPDDR3 up to 4GB GSM, UMTS, GPRS, HSPA+, HSUPA, TD-SCDMA, EVDO, LTE Cat 4 2016
Octa- and deca-core

List of devices using Mediatek SoCs#ARMv8 Octa Core

Model number CPU ISA fab CPU GPU Memory technology Wireless radio technologies Released
MT6752[100] ARMv8-A (64-bit) 28 nm HPM 1.7 GHz octa-core ARM Cortex-A53 Mali-T760 MP2 @ 700 MHz[87] 32-bit single-channel 800 MHz LPDDR3 (6.4 GB/sec) GSM, UMTS, GPRS, HSPA+, HSUPA, TD-SCDMA, LTE Cat 4 Q3 2014
MT6752M 28 nm HPM 1.5 GHz octa-core ARM Cortex-A53 Mali-T760 MP2 @ 700 MHz[87] 32-bit single-channel 800 MHz LPDDR3 (6.4 GB/sec) GSM, UMTS, GPRS, HSPA+, HSUPA, TD-SCDMA, LTE Cat 4 Q3 2014
MT6753[101] 28 nm 1.5 GHz octa-core ARM Cortex-A53 Mali-T720 MP3 @ 700 MHz[98] GSM, UMTS, GPRS, HSPA+, HSUPA, TD-SCDMA, CDMA2000 1x/EVDO Rev. A, Cat 4 FDD and TD-LTE Q3 2015
MT6750 28 nm HPM 1.0 GHz quad-core ARM Cortex-A53 and 1.5 GHz quad-core ARM Cortex-A53[102] Mali-T860 MP2 @ 520 MHz[103] 32-bit single-channel 666 MHz LPDDR3 up to 4GB GSM, UMTS, GPRS, HSPA+, HSUPA, TD-SCDMA, CDMA2000 1x/EVDO Rev. A, Cat 6 FDD and TD-LTE w/ 20+20 CA, VoLTE Q2 2016
MT6750T 28 nm HPM Mali-T860 MP2 @ 650 MHz[104] 32-bit single-channel 833 MHz LPDDR3 up to 4GB GSM, UMTS, GPRS, HSPA+, HSUPA, TD-SCDMA, CDMA2000 1x/EVDO Rev. A, Cat 6 FDD and TD-LTE w/ 20+20 CA, VoLTE Q2 2016
Helio P10; MT6755[105] 28 nm HPC+ Up to 2 GHz octa-core ARM Cortex-A53 Mali-T860 MP2 @ 700 MHz[106] 32-bit single-channel 933 MHz LPDDR3 (7.4 GB/sec) GSM, UMTS, GPRS, HSPA+, HSUPA, TD-SCDMA, CDMA2000 1x/EVDO Rev. A, Cat 6 FDD and TD-LTE w/ 20+20 CA Q4 2015
Helio P20; MT675?[107] 16 nm FFC Up to 2.3 GHz octa-core ARM Cortex-A53 Mali-T880 MP2 @ 900 MHz[108] 32-bit dual-channel 1600 MHz LPDDR4x (25.6 GB/sec) GSM, UMTS, GPRS, HSPA+, HSUPA, TD-SCDMA, CDMA2000 1x/EVDO Rev. A, Cat 6 FDD and TD-LTE w/ 20+20 CA Q3 2016
Helio X10; MT6795[37] 28 nm HPM Up to 2.2 GHz octa-core ARM Cortex-A53 PowerVR G6200 @ 700 MHz[87] 32-bit dual-channel 933 MHz LPDDR3 (14.9 GB/sec) GSM, UMTS, GPRS, HSPA+, HSUPA, TD-SCDMA, LTE Cat 4 Q4 2014
Helio X20; MT6797 20 nm HPM Up to 2.3 GHz Dual-core ARM Cortex-A72, 2 GHz quad-core ARM Cortex-A53, 1.4 GHz quad-core ARM Cortex-A53 Mali-T880 MP4 @ 780 MHz[87][109] 32-bit dual-channel 933 MHz LPDDR3 GSM, UMTS, GPRS, HSPA+, HSUPA, TD-SCDMA, CDMA2000 1x/EVDO Rev. A, Cat 6 FDD and TD-LTE w/ 20+20 CA Q4 2015
Helio X25; MT6797T 20 nm HPM Up to 2.5 GHz Dual-core ARM Cortex-A72, 2 GHz quad-core ARM Cortex-A53, 1.4 GHz quad-core ARM Cortex-A53 Mali-T880 MP4 @ 850 MHz[87][110] 32-bit dual-channel 933 MHz LPDDR3 GSM, UMTS, GPRS, HSPA+, HSUPA, TD-SCDMA, CDMA2000 1x/EVDO Rev. A, Cat 6 FDD and TD-LTE w/ 20+20 CA Q4 2015
Helio X30; MT679? 10 nm FF+ Up to 2.8 GHz Dual-core ARM Artemis, 2.2 GHz Quad-core ARM Cortex-A53, 2.0 GHz Quad-core ARM Cortex-A35 PowerVR 7XT @ 800 MHz[87] 32-bit dual-channel 1600 MHz LPDDR4X GSM, UMTS, GPRS, HSPA+, HSUPA, TD-SCDMA, CDMA2000 1x/EVDO Rev. A, Cat 13 FDD and TD-LTE w/ 20+20 CA Q1 2017

Modem processors

Model number fab Wireless radio technologies Compatible with Released
MT6290[111] 28 nm LTE R9 (4G), DC-HSPA+, W-CDMA, TD-SCDMA, EDGE and GSM/GPRS MT6592, MT6582 Q1 2014

Standalone application and tablet processors

List of devices using Mediatek tablet processors

Model Number CPU ISA CPU CPU cache GPU Memory technology Wireless radio technologies Released
MT8317 ARMv7 1.0 GHz dual-core ARM Cortex-A9 PowerVR SGX531 Ultra @ 522 MHz[87] 2013
MT8317T[112] ARMv7 1.2 GHz dual-core ARM Cortex-A9 PowerVR SGX531 Ultra @ 522 MHz[87] 2013
MT8312[113] ARMv7 1.3 GHz dual-core ARM Cortex-A7 256 KB L2 Mali-400 @ 500 MHz[87] Multi-mode Rel. 8 HSPA+/TD-SCDMA, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, GPS 1H 2014
MT8382[114] ARMv7 1.3 GHz quad-core ARM Cortex-A7[115] 256 KB L2 Mali-400 MP2 @ 500 MHz[87] Multi-mode Rel. 8 HSPA+/TD-SCDMA, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, GPS 1H 2014
MT8125[116] ARMv7 1.2 GHz quad-core ARM Cortex-A7 1 MB L2 PowerVR SGX544MP1 @ 256 MHz 32-bit LPDDR2/DDR3L 1H 2013
MT8389 / MT8389T ARMv7 1.2 / 1.5 GHz quad-core ARM Cortex-A7 1 MB L2 PowerVR SGX544 @ 286/357 MHz[87] 32-bit LPDDR2/DDR3L 3G 1H 2013
MT8121[112] ARMv7 1.3 GHz quad-core ARM Cortex-A7 PowerVR SGX544 @ 156 MHz[87] Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, GPS 2H 2013
MT8127[117][118] ARMv7 1.3 GHz quad-core ARM Cortex-A7 512 KB L2 Mali-450 MP4 @ 600 MHz[87] 32-bit 666 MHz DDR3 (5.3 GB/s)[118] Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, FM, GPS 2014
MT8135[119] ARMv7 1.7 GHz dual-core ARM Cortex-A15 and 1.2 GHz dual-core ARM Cortex-A7[119] PowerVR G6200 (2 clusters) @ 450 MHz[87] Announced 2013
MT8135V[119][120] ARMv7 1.5 GHz dual-core ARM Cortex-A15 and 1.2 GHz dual-core ARM Cortex-A7[119] PowerVR G6200 (two clusters) @ 450 MHz[87] 32-bit DDR3L[120] Q3 2014
MT8117 ARMv7 1.2 GHz dual-core ARM Cortex-A7 PowerVR SGX544 @ 156 MHz[87] 1H 2014
MT8392[121] ARMv7 2.0 GHz octa-core ARM Cortex-A7 32 KB L1, 1 MB L2 Mali-450 MP4 @ 700 MHz[87] 3G 1H 2014
MT8732[122] ARMv8 1.5 GHz quad-core ARM Cortex-A53 512 KB L2 Mali-T760 MP2 @ 500 MHz[87] Up to 800 MHz LPDDR3 (6.4 GB/s) LTE Cat 4 (4G), 3G, 2G, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, FM, GPS/Glonass/BeiDou Q4 2014
MT8752[123] 1.7 GHz octa-core ARM Cortex-A53 Mali-T760 MP2 @ 700 MHz[87] LTE Cat 4 (4G), 3G, 2G etc. Q4 2014
MT8163[124] 1.3 GHz quad-core ARM Cortex-A53 Mali-T720 MP2 800 MHz DDR3/L Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, FM, GPS Q2 2015
MT8173[125] Up to 2.4 GHz dual-core ARM Cortex-A72 and dual-core ARM Cortex-A53 PowerVR GX6250 (2 clusters) Q1 2015

Wearable device SoCs

At the Consumer Electronics Show show in January 2015, MediaTek announced the MT2601 for wearable devices based on Google’s Android Wear software. According to MediaTek, with its small size it allows fewer components and lower current consumption when compared with other chipsets in the market. The chip includes a dual-core ARM Cortex-A7 CPU, an ARM Mali-400 MP GPU, and allows display resolutions up to qHD (960x540). It can be combined with the MT6630 chip for wireless connectivity.[126]

Wireless connectivity SoC

MT6630 (2014) is a five-in-one combo wireless SoC integrating dual-band 802.11a/b/g/n/ac, advanced Wi-Fi Direct and Miracast support, Bluetooth 4.1, ANT+, tri-band GPS and FM transceiver. It is intended to be paired with chips like the MT6595 octa-core smartphone processor which features an integrated 4G modem but no built-in Wi-Fi/Bluetooth/GPS/FM functionality. It could also be used in tablets in conjunction with a stand-alone application processor.[42]

GNSS modules

Global navigation satellite system (GNSS) modules.

IEEE 802.11

As a result of the merger with Ralink, MediaTek has added wireless network interface controllers for IEEE 802.11-standards, and SoCs with MIPS CPUs to its product portfolio.

Digital television SoCs

At the Consumer Electronics Show show in January 2015, MediaTek announced the MT5595, a new digital television SoC with support for Google's Android TV platform.[43] It has been adopted by Sony for new LCD TV models.[44]

Model Number CPU GPU Video decoder Video encoder Integrated connectivity Segment Released
MT5366[129] MPEG1/2/4, H.264, VC-1, RMVB, AVS TCON/OD, Ethernet MAC 60 Hz cost-efficient TV
MT5389[130] MPEG1/2/4, H.264, VC-1, RMVB, AVS, VP8 TCON, 3 x HDMI 1.4 Basic 60 Hz 3D TV
MT5395[131] MPEG1/2/4, H.264, VC-1, RMVB, AVS 720p H.264 TCON/OD, Ethernet PHY, HDMI 1.4 Full-HD 120 Hz, 3D LCD TV with ME/MC
MT5396[132] MPEG1/2/4, H.264, VC-1, RMVB, AVS, VP8 TCON/OD, Ethernet PHY Full-HD 120 Hz, 3D LCD TV with ME/MC (Smart TV)
MT5398[133] Dual-core ARM Cortex-A9 Yes MPEG-1/2/4, H.264, VC-1, RMVB, AVS, VP8 TCON, HDMI 1.4 Smart 3D TV
MT5505[134] Dual-core Cortex-A9 ARM Mali-4xx MP2 MPEG-1/2/4, H.264, VC-1, RMVB, AVS, VP8 TCON, HDMI 1.4 Smart 3D TV
MT5580[135] Cortex-A9 TCON, Ethernet PHY + MAC, HDMI 1.4 Connected 3D TV
MT5595[43] Dual-core ARM Cortex-A17 + dual-core ARM Cortex-A7 ARM Mali-T6xx?[136] 4K HEVC/VP9 @ 60 fps Android TV, UltraHD Q1 2015

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