sandorski
No Lifer
- Oct 10, 1999
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That's highly debatable... hence the discussion almost 10 years later.
Not really. At this point it's just some peoples whipping horse.
That's highly debatable... hence the discussion almost 10 years later.
Actually intel purchasing amd is an intriguing thought, but govt regulators would never let it happen. But it would be quite interesting to see AMD dgpus and apus manufactured on intels process nodes.
Why would any new buyer of AMD continue to make x86 chips?
How have the previous non-Intel makers of x86 chips done?
Think IBM, VIA, AMD.
What's more, are they going to spend 5 years to produce an x86 chip they hope will compete with Intel?
Try being rational, not emotional.
You have a non-competitive x86 chip right away.OK, rationally speaking, if you are Qualcomm and you buy AMD, you have an x86 chip right away, not in 5 years.
LOL It is going to take a lot more than a year to get any AMD chip in a state that they would be desirable for a phone.Maybe it would take a year for Qualcomm engineers to spin it with their flows to fit into a phone envelope and integrate it with a modem, but even there, you aren't starting with a clean sheet 5 year design.
In tablet and PC, you are ready to go.
Now you have a choice. You can build an ARM chip that only works on Android, or x86 chip that works on Android and also allows you to sell into the Windows ecosystem. Rationally, why would you pay for a license to make an ARM chip which would limit your TAM to very competitive Android SOC segment, if you could build an x86 chip that works for that segment and also with Windows, where you'd have a duopoly with a player accustomed to 50% monopoly gross margins?
Again, the subject is highly debatable -- THAT, is what is not up to debate.Not really. At this point it's just some peoples whipping horse.
Well, they've got the money. IBM did as well, of course, but Qualcomm could certainly be a strong opponent.Why would Qualcomm think they would do any better than IBM, VIA or AMD did in the Windows ecosystem?
If you compare the ATI purchase to other acquisitions you'd see this is absolutely not true. Intel picked up McAfee for almost $8 billion. D: That was a 62% premium.They overpaid tremendously.
I'd love to see Intel buy either AMD or NVIDIA. Amazing dGPUs on Intel process + great iGPUs inside of Intel's CPUs? Sounds great.
If you compare the ATI purchase to other acquisitions you'd see this is absolutely not true. Intel picked up McAfee for almost $8 billion. D: That was a 62% premium.
Will you love the prices, too?
AMD could not afford to be left behind, having only CPU tech would have doomed them. Imagine today all AMD had in their portfolio was products directly competing with Intel. I can't believe anyone thinks this is a good idea. :thumbsdown:McAfee was a waste of money, but Intel could afford it. AMD could not.
AMD could not afford to be left behind, having only CPU tech would have doomed them. Imagine today all AMD had in their portfolio was products directly competing with Intel. I can't believe anyone thinks this is a good idea. :thumbsdown:
In fact AMD would not even be able to do that because most all Intel processors have a GPU.
If you compare the ATI purchase to other acquisitions you'd see this is absolutely not true. Intel picked up McAfee for almost $8 billion. D: That was a 62% premium.
Intel needs to convince people to upgrade, and by making CPUs/GPUs prohibitively expensive, volumes drop, factories don't get utilized, and people shift more of their money to smartphones/tablets.
You have a non-competitive x86 chip right away.
LOL It is going to take a lot more than a year to get any AMD chip in a state that they would be desirable for a phone.
With the current AMD chips, you would be going nowhere.
Intel is the only one getting 50%+ gross margins amongst semiconductor companies in the Windows ecosystem.
Why would Qualcomm think they would do any better than IBM, VIA or AMD did in the Windows ecosystem?
Seriously?Is this the right place to place offers for AMD?
I offer 52 cents in pocket change and 1 wheel of luxurious cheese that was personally appraised by a cheese critic.
Can't really imagine anyone would offer more than me.
Again, Debt didn't increase this quarter. Revenue came in at its projected levels. It just seem like another thread with a bunch of ***holes that are rooting for a total collapse that will never happen -- but love to talk about it month after month. AMD has shrunk it reliance on the PC industry. Will they make CPU's 5 years from now? I doubt it. They will likely continue to shrink the business and probably shutter divisions and layoff more people.... The company will look a lot different a decade from now. People have been predicting the death of Matrox, VIA and AMD for the past 20 years.... and none of them are probably going anywhere.
A lot of people have a short memory -- like ignoring 2007, When AMD was losing around $500 million every quarter. 2014 pales by comparison. "This is the Voice of Doom speaking! Special Bulletin! Flash! The Sky is Falling."
Because they could sell x86 into their current Android market as well. They could transition Krait to x86 and merge the chip lines to get economies of scale. Windows market share would be gravy. Different situation than AMD which has to pay the whole bill effectively.
[Without the ATI purchase] AMD would be dead and buried.
That position is absurd.
Apple has turned licensed graphics IP into Billions and Billions. AMD's route cost them billions and billions that they couldn't afford.
Intel is struggling to gain a foothold in the Android market with x86, what makes you think a company that has never built an x86 processor and with a manufacturing deficit, would do better than Intel?
If Qualcomm were to buy AMD, they would not be a company that never built an x86 processor anymore, since they would own one that has.
They don't need to do better than Intel on x86, since like I said, any x86 business would just be gravy to their already strong Android business that could be served by x86.
After TSMC and Samsung move to Fin-FET, Intel's advantage will not be as significant as it is now, and in many segments
Plus it's not like they would be betting the company on it. AMD has $3B enterprise value. Qualcomm has market cap of $120B, and $18B in cash.
They could buy AMD several times over without having to borrow or issue shares.
Licensing is a non-issue.
Do you think if Qualcomm buys AMD, Intel will sue to get AMD chips off store shelves because Qualcomm owned AMD is no longer licensed?
And you don't think they are going to get raked over anti-trust coals for doing it?
Microsoft had to pay $500M to EU just for including Media Player in Windows. Qualcomm itself is about to pay a 10 figure fine in China for not licensing LTE on favorable enough terms for Chinese equipment and chip makers. Intel trying to get the main x86 competitor banned would dwarf these.
You really think anyone at Intel management is stupid enough to try to force this issue?