Assman, your pictures rock my world (although I think the moderators would rightfully have an issue with them, as well as it would be offensive to many women).
I sure hope AMD isn't think about buying anything, where the hell would they get the cash?
hmmm well i dont know if that is a great decision since they are already low on money, but i guess not too low.
I surely hope AMD's next set or processors will be amazing and we will be back to the Intel AMD wars again where we get good prices and better technology
The Korean Government massively subsidizes their DRAM makers (as in "dumping" as define by the WTO), the industry is a yoyo price wise, and long term it's a low margin business, at very best....
AMD is billions in debt, bleeding like a stick pig, ... so lets add billions more debt so they can expand their business into a low margin arena and pay more interest with money they are not making... so the can buy a 3rd rate player in a market where nobody makes money anyway....
I think they want to cram a CPU, GPU, AND 8 GB of RAM under a winky HSF. It is going to be called Con-Fusion.
Memory business OMG is Hector still working there??? I think Intel tried something with the memory game and couldn't make a dime when flash margins dropped, but don't remember all the details.
Maybe they are trying to tank the stock on purpose, or make the company go under. This makes no sense.
Message edited by Falken699 on 09-11-2007 at 03:22:39 AM
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djcoolmasterx - "Ofcourse there is nothing that you are doing that will use that kind of power, beacuse you don't have that kind of powr to do things with."
Intel is still in the Memory game. They have the combined company called IM for Intel Micron for NAND flash and they and ST Micro are planning to make a new company for NOR flash.
Remember. Intel started out as a memory company and morphed into a processor company back in the early 80's.
AMD had a joint NOR flash business with Fujitsu since the early 90's. In early 2000 their memory business was a heavy drag on the balance sheet, losing money like a clockwork - so much so that every quarterly conference call the analysts asked when AMD would rid itself off the memory business. In 2005 AMD finally divested itself and the joint venture went public under the name Spansion.
Somehow I thought that that nightmare was still fresh in the company's memory (no pun intended). Apparently not.
Intel is still in the Memory game. They have the combined company called IM for Intel Micron for NAND flash and they and ST Micro are planning to make a new company for NOR flash.
Remember. Intel started out as a memory company and morphed into a processor company back in the early 80's.
Remember also, that AMD spun off it's Spanasion division, to save money. So, why would they want to invest in another memory company, after spinning off it's own joint venture company?
First, from a perspective based on their current financial situation, I have to agree that it doesn't seem like a good decision. But just for fun, if they could buy Qimonda and stay afloat, that gives them processor + chipset + GPU + memory = complete platform. They could sell entire systems dirt cheap. If price wars are going to go on, and they will, then AMD has to think VOLUME. What better way than to sell millions of cheap systems made entirely from AMD components.
Odd, I made a post and it got deleted, though I didn't think I said anything that should be offensive, but rather commented on something I thought was offensive. Oh well.
Back to the subject from the OP, I doubt that AMD could get the financing to buy anything new, much less a ram company that is loosing money. I would class the Reuters report as rumor only, and then forget it. Rumors circulate constantly that never turn into reality. As it is, AMD needs to concentrate on getting Barcelona to run faster.
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Evil lurks in the databanks as it lurked in the streets of yesteryear. But it was never the streets that were evil.