Citing "people familiar with the deal," the Times said that Apple purchased Intrinsity. The report also included an estimated $121 million purchase price, provided by Tom R. Halfill, an analyst with Microprocessor Report.
Apple spokesman Steve Dowling indirectly confirmed the purchase, stating that the the hardware maker "buys smaller technology companies from time to time." However, he added that Apple does not reveal "purpose or plans" with any acquisition.
Sources also confirmed to the Times that Intrinsity helped to design the custom A4 processor found in the recently released iPad. Weeks ago, one analyst suggested that only Intrinsity could have delivered the A4 processor with its snappy 1GHz clock speed. The Cortex-A8 reference design on which the A4 is based can only be clocked up to 650MHz.
In early April, rumors first surfaced that Apple purchased Intrinsity to help build the A4. Evidence to support the acquisition surfaced when a number of Intrinsity employees changed their company status on LinkedIn to Apple on the first of the month.
It's yet another purchase for Apple in the mobile processor space. In 2008, Apple also bought fabless chip designer P.A. Semi for $278 million in 2008.
Apple also bought a 3 percent stake in 2008 in Imagination Technologies, maker of the PowerVR mobile graphics chip found in the company's mobile devices, including the iPhone. Last year, Apple bumped its share to 9.5 percent. In addition to partnering with Apple, Imagination also competes with ARM Holdings, which makes the reference designs for chips that power the iPhone, iPod touch and iPad.
Last week, a rumor surfaced that Apple was looking to buy ARM, though the company's CEO quickly downplayed that speculation, suggesting an acquisition would be of little benefit to Apple. Again on Tuesday, ARM's CEO made an attempt to dispel rumors of an Apple takeover during a quarterly conference call in which the British chip designer reported record sales.
Speculation of Apple purchases have persisted for some time, as Apple has accrued a massive amount of cash and reserves. Earlier this year, Apple co-founder Steve Jobs said Apple must "think big" with its massive war chest of $40 billion. The CEO also said that his company would take "big," bold" risks.
16 Comments
The iPad was a big bold move though now it looks like a no brainer. The thing has only been around for a few weeks yet its already the yardstick by which every new tablet will be measured.
The iPad was a big bold move though now it looks like a no brainer. The thing has only been around for a few weeks yet its already the yardstick by which every new tablet will be measured.
And apparently only needs to sell 1.09 million units to equal the total number of tablet computers sold last year.
They should be busy along with the PA Semi guys/gals. Just looking at Apple's current lineup.
We need new designs for
Apple TV
It needs to be synchronized with today's iPhone OS platform. We also need gaming support, Gigabit ethernet, Bluetooth and 1080p support. For Mother Earth's sake please put a power button on as well. Upgrade the HDMI to 1.4 too. Thanks
Airport Extreme/Time Capsule
Only real upgrades I can think about are a third radio for 450Mbps throughput and more bare bones NAS features for the Time Capsule.
I think the next product to use custom designed chips would be
Apple Home Server.
I think it would be an ARM Cortex MP A9 processor running an iPhone OS flavor. It'll sync multiple iTunes accounts to one centralized store and support multiple Time Machine backups. It'll have 4 drive bays and be easy to setup like a Drobo and will support Mobileme 2.0 and feature direct support for a much improved iDisk (which will rival Dropbox)
</raving speculation>
These guys should be busy busy busy.
hmurchison
's post seconded.
hmurchison post seconded.
count me in! lol