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andrewia | 2 years ago
The whole thing definitely seems symptomatic of Intel's extreme caution. I wonder why they didn't apply the same caution when buying Barefoot. Intel obviously didn't have a great idea on how to leverage them.
This is all in stark contrast to AMD buying Pensando, a company that my SO works for. It makes sense for AMD to acquire Pensando to expand their data center offerings and compete directly with Intel. I think AMD made a smart buy.
lisper|2 years ago
> It still seems like a ridiculously foolish idea, considering how much money Intel spent acquiring Barefoot
Acquiring companies in order to kill them is a horrible business practice but not unusual. The thing that makes no sense to me is why they kept it going for three years before killing it. If they bought it in order to kill it, they should have done that before spending another hundred million on it.
ethbr1|2 years ago
Internal politics?
Presumably the internal team(s) with overlap were against the acquisition.
But it was likely easier to see if the integration failed on its own before spending the political capital to kill it.
Folks forget executives at large companies usually optimize for "my career" over "the company."
touisteur|2 years ago
At this point, if it's not about x86 cpus, listening to Intel's roadmaps seems foolish.
ithkuil|2 years ago
burnte|2 years ago
So insane. It's always better in invent the next big thing that changes the market than a competitor, even if it kills another product of your own.