Intel Corp. has purchased privately held Mobilian Corp. to expand its wireless networking portfolio, an Intel spokesman confirmed
Friday.
Mobilian, based in Hillsboro, Oregon, makes an integrated 802.11b/Bluetooth chipset called TrueRadio for cell phones, said
Daniel Francisco, an Intel spokesman. The company has about 70 employees in Oregon and in Del Mar, California, and most of
the employees are expected to join Intel's wireless networking group, he said.
Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.
Intel has spent a lot of time this year promoting the 802.11 wireless silicon used in the Centrino package for notebooks.
The company has released an 802.11b and 802.11a/b chip, but does not have a Bluetooth chip available for purchase.
Intel's processors for personal digital assistants and cell phones do support the standard, and Intel's Wireless Coexistence
Software helps to smooth out interference between Bluetooth and 802.11b, which operate on the same 2.4GHz frequency used by
many other wireless devices.
Mobilian's TrueRadio product will help Intel build upon its current wireless strategy, but any products based on the technology
will not be available for some time, Francisco said.
Texas Instruments Inc. demonstrated a multichip reference design earlier this year that combined the Bluetooth, 802.11b and
GSM/GPRS (Global System for Mobile Communications/General Packet Radio Service) wireless technologies into a single personal
digital assistant.
After a torrid pace of acquisitions in the late 1990s, Intel had slowed its buying activity. But earlier this year the Santa
Clara, California, company purchased West Bay Semiconductor Inc., an optical networking chip designer, and part of Pallas
GmbH, a supercomputer software developer.