If other chipmaker can do it, Intel wouldn't downsized so much of its workforce recently.
He was saying why wouldn't a chipmaker buy them. The cost for ARM is about 1.5 years of Intel income.
If other chipmaker can do it, Intel wouldn't downsized so much of its workforce recently.
God damn. Where does Softbank get all this money? Like I know they're Japan's biggest carrier but there's got to be some secret side business I don't know about.
God damn. Where does Softbank get all this money? Like I know they're Japan's biggest carrier but there's got to be some secret side business I don't know about.
He was saying why wouldn't a chipmaker buy them. The cost for ARM is about 1.5 years of Intel income.
They're more of an investment company than a wireless carrier. They like to invest in tech. Softbank's initial investment in Alibaba was like 20 million dollars. Today, it's worth around 60 billion. That's their biggest ever by far, but they have all sorts of deals like that under their umbrella.
I just... how is it even legal to purchase a company as big as ARM? They are such a huge part in a field without many players that you would think that as long as they weren't financially insolvent they would be required to stay independent.
Bow to our fluffy overlord.
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Can these secondary companies not really match the tech put out by ARM? If not, why not? Some secret sauce? I'm confused as to why they exist, especially if that's their only role.Remember, ARM doesn't actually fabricate any chips, they only license it out to companies.
Companies like Qualcomm and Apple customize the chips and then TSMC/Samsung manufacture them
Softbank said:As an integral part of the transaction, we intend to at least double the number of employees employed by ARM in the UK over the next five years
They must have big plans to change ARM's business since their revenue does not match up with the purchase price.
Chip making is a difficult thing to do. And you can't just copy them, since they hold he patents and such, so you take a license on their work.Can these secondary companies not really match the tech put out by ARM? If not, why not? Some secret sauce? I'm confused as to why they exist, especially if that's their only role.
I have shares in ARM, what is best next step? I am still new to this and I am not sure whether to sell or what.
if your unsure, give them to me.
Can these secondary companies not really match the tech put out by ARM? If not, why not? Some secret sauce? I'm confused as to why they exist, especially if that's their only role.
Any remotly decent cpu company could probably come up with an ISA as good or better than ARM. However like x86, better is't nearly as relevant as is the amount of software that exist for it. Hence R&D from a grip of companies gets thrown into pushing it along since mobile is basically locked into them at this point.
Google or whoever could probably change to MIPS or whatever with at the worst no performance difference. But if nothing but stock Android(or IOS for argument purposes) runs well on it and everyone has to recompile all their apps none of that actually matters. ARM was cheap and a good architecture for low power at the right time so it what everyone mobile went with it.
I just... how is it even legal to purchase a company as big as ARM? They are such a huge part in a field without many players that you would think that as long as they weren't financially insolvent they would be required to stay independent.
MIPS still has to be licensed from Imagination Technologies. Other companies could probably come up with their own chips but it would not be trivial I think. There's more to chip design than just deriving an instruction set. They probably think it to be better to use their engineers elsewhere.
So they don't get the Verilog/VHDL cpu core design code? I did not know this. Edit: So there's apparently core licensing and architectural licensing. With companies mentioned being architectural licensees.I'm guessing a MIPS license is pretty cheap right now but that wasn't really the point, it was just another ISA that came to mind. It isn't necessarily trivial but there also isn't really anything special from a purely technical standpoint of ARM's ISA. They were cheap and low power at the right time so the majority of the software ecosystem for mobile developed on them creating a similar lock in to x86 in the desktop arena.
On your point about the instruction set, to a point thats right but the most prominent ARM suppliers do only get an ISA from them. Apple, Qualcomm, Samsung, and Nvidia are ARM architecture licensees and do only license the ISA(snapdragon 810 withstanding) and design the actual SOC themselves.
So disappointing to see a world dominating british company being sold to a foreign owner
Those nice BREXIT Summer Sale discounts.
Negative.
ARM make most of their money in dollars. In fact, after Brexit, their shares went up.
Negative.
ARM make most of their money in dollars. In fact, after Brexit, their shares went up.
Those nice BREXIT Summer Sale discounts.
So disappointing to see a world dominating british company being sold to a foreign owner
Its primary listing is on the LSE. The Japanese Yen has gone up and the UK pound has gone down. Paying in yen converted into pounds, it is a huge discount from say, 4 weeks ago.
Another British company in foreign hands. Do we own anything anymore?