July 31, 2006

AMD's ATI purchase will yield long-term payout

$5.4 billion deal for graphics chip vendor positions AMD well for the future

AMD’s planned $5.4 billion merger with Canada-based graphics chip vendor ATI Technologies prompted some indignant sniffing about “desperation” among the technology sector’s chattering class. That kind of second-guessing is natural, especially on the heels of AMD’s decision to cut prices in half on some of its PC processors, which prompted similar action from Intel. But no matter what you’ve read, AMD’s CPU price cuts and its acquisition of ATI are not signs that the company is on a downward slide.

First, the fuse on AMD’s price cuts was lit well before they were made public. AMD enjoyed lucrative margins on Turion 64 and Athlon 64 FX notebook and performance desktop CPUs, right up until the invitations went out for the July 27 launch of Intel’s Core 2 Duo 64-bit client CPU, code-named Conroe. The cannily timed price cuts of as much as 57 percent on AMD’s 64-bit desktop and notebook CPUs allowed AMD to crash Intel’s Conroe party last Thursday.

The purchase of ATI may go down as one of AMD’s most brilliant strokes yet. ATI is best known for GPUs (graphics processing units) used on 3-D and full-motion image-rendering PC video cards. ATI roughly splits that market with rival nVidia. But ATI is the stronger of the two vendors in mobile and motherboard-integrated GPUs, both big growth areas. ATI gives AMD an answer to the integrated graphics circuitry that Intel baked into its Core Duo and Core 2 Duo CPU support chip sets.

But ATI’s value extends beyond the graphics arena. ATI also makes chip sets for Intel- and AMD-based PCs. Since the debut of AMD64, AMD has left the chip-set business to third parties. Whereas Intel makes its own chip sets and controls the pricing and supply, AMD has been at the mercy of third-party chip-set pricing and delays, as well as performance and quality issues. The ATI and AMD deal doesn’t go before shareholders until later this year. Until then, ATI and AMD will be happily and profitably living in sin.

Tom Yager writes InfoWorld's Mobile Edge blog.
Close

On Twitter now

Platforms

Powered by Twitter

On Twitter now

White Paper

D2D Virtual Tape Library Replication Primer

This whitepaper explains the terminology and concepts behind Data Replication technologies and establishes some sizing rules through worked examples. Learn the new paradigm in disaster tolerance—protect data anywhere.

Download now »

White Paper

An Alternative to Virtualization for Datacenter Cost Savings

Server virtualization is a popular option for dealing with mounting datacenter costs. Another equally promising approach is the use of an Application Delivery Controller. Citrix NetScaler provides a low-cost way for organizations to reduce their server count and accrue cost savings from a reduction in space, cooling, power and personnel.

Download now »

White Paper

Why Your Firewall, VPN, and IEEE 802.11i Aren't Enough to Protect Your Network

The emergence of WLANs has created a new breed of security threats to enterprise networks.

Included in HP ProCurve WLAN solutions is security technology that alleviates threats from WLANs through:
* Monitoring wireless activity inside and out of the enterprise
* Classifying WLAN transmissions into harmful and harmless
* Preventing transmissions that pose a security threat to the enterprise network
* Locating participating devices for physical remediation

Download now »

White Paper

Bringing the Edge to the Data Center

Effectively address data protection challenges, implementing solutions that help store and protect business–critical data while cutting costs and improving efficiency and reliability.

Download now »

Sign up to receive Platforms Resource Alerts

Subscribe to the Today's Headlines: First Look Newsletter

Find out what will be news for the day, with our first-thing-in-the-morning briefing.

©1994-2009 Infoworld, Inc.