04/23/2008, 9:40am, EDT
Wednesday, April 23rdfrom: www.electronista.com
Apple buys chipmaker PA Semi
In an unusual deal, Apple has announced a decision to buy PA Semi, a microprocessor design company. An Apple spokesman, Steve Dowling, has declined to elaborate on the reasons or terms of the deal, except to say that Apple "buys smaller technology companies from time to time," and it does not comment on "purposes and plans." It is atypical however for the company to buy hardware firms, particularly as it has come to rely on ready-made components from a variety of manufacturers such as Intel, Samsung and Infineon. A source cited by Forbes claims the deal cost $278 million in cash.
PA Semi is 150-person company that designs low-power chips, and was founded in 2003 by Dan Dobberpuhl, formerly a lead designer on the Alpha and StrongARM chips created by Digital Equipment. The acquisition has thus fueled speculation that Apple intends to design custom processors for devices like the iPhone or the iPod, possibly as a means of distinguishing its platform, but potentially in order to retain high margins on the sale of each unit.
The connection between PA and Apple runs back several years, as at one point Dobberpuhl intended to design a chip based on PowerPC architecture; the switch to Intel CPUs for Macs ultimately ended any talks, but Apple is said to have watched the company closely ever since.
Forbes notes that it will likely be at least a year before Apple products with PA Semi chips are released. It is also rumored that while Apple is promising to support its acquisition's current customers, the company will eventually make PA Semi technology exclusive.
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sorry to dig up that old (non-)joke, but does that mean we finally get a G5 powerbook!
The owner of the company was the designer of some of the original 64-bit chips from 25 years ago_ So he's got a piss load of experience building 64-bit Processors_
Not sure what Apple has in mind as they just switched their main product line from RISC POWER to Intel x86 - as the processors that AP Semi makes can be utilized in nearly every product that Apple makes currently_
But the main thing I did get from this is that Apple may be looking at them for their chipset design skills and not necessarily manufacturing_ But again the whole RISC thing throws me as they just left the platform and the chip design is different from RISC to x86_
interesting_