It's not like design teams are fixed by some holy power. Intel can shift design teams around at will, and put their AAA team on any project or program they want.
I don't even think that is fair to Intel's mobile design teams.
It may come as a big surprise to some folks here but engineers don't design any old thing that strikes their fancy.
They get a pretty specific target spec from strategic marketing folks who are supposed to have a really good idea what features and specs will make a winning product 2 to 4 years down the road.
You cannot blame Intel's mobile design teams UNLESS they fell short of achieving in silicon the goals asked of them and that does not appear to be the case. Whether their design goals were the RIGHT ones for commercial success is a totally different manner and is out of the engineer's hands.
If you ask an engineer to design a camel and then enter it in a horse race and it doesn't win you don't blame the engineer.
It's not like design teams are fixed by some holy power. Intel can shift design teams around at will, and put their AAA team on any project or program they want.
that's great news that pc/server chip engineers can move seamlessly into the mobile area..because then it stands to reason the reverse is also true...and the ARM guys will have competitive products challenging Intel's cash cows (servers and pc chips) in no time at all.