Saturday, March 24th 2012
AMD Completes Acquisition of SeaMicro
AMD today announced it completed the acquisition of SeaMicro Inc., a pioneer in energy-efficient, high-bandwidth microservers, for approximately $334 million, net of cash assumed.
The acquisition of SeaMicro, which will now become AMD's Data Center Server Solutions business, enables AMD to accelerate its strategy to deliver disruptive server technology and provide its customers serving Cloud-centric data centers with highly-differentiated AMD-based solutions beginning this year.
"Our unique fabric technology is truly one of the crown jewels of the Cloud," said Lisa Su, senior vice president and general manager, Global Business Units, AMD. "The combination of this innovative technology with our processor design expertise greatly enhances our ability to attack the fastest growing portion of the server market with industry-leading low-power, low-cost, high-bandwidth solutions."
The purchase price consists of a cash payment of approximately $293 million as well as AMD's assumption of options to purchase approximately 6,475,000 AMD shares and the issuance of approximately 322,000 shares of AMD restricted stock. This transaction is included in AMD's first quarter of 2012 earnings guidance.
The acquisition of SeaMicro, which will now become AMD's Data Center Server Solutions business, enables AMD to accelerate its strategy to deliver disruptive server technology and provide its customers serving Cloud-centric data centers with highly-differentiated AMD-based solutions beginning this year.
"Our unique fabric technology is truly one of the crown jewels of the Cloud," said Lisa Su, senior vice president and general manager, Global Business Units, AMD. "The combination of this innovative technology with our processor design expertise greatly enhances our ability to attack the fastest growing portion of the server market with industry-leading low-power, low-cost, high-bandwidth solutions."
The purchase price consists of a cash payment of approximately $293 million as well as AMD's assumption of options to purchase approximately 6,475,000 AMD shares and the issuance of approximately 322,000 shares of AMD restricted stock. This transaction is included in AMD's first quarter of 2012 earnings guidance.
34 Comments on AMD Completes Acquisition of SeaMicro
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disruptive_technology
Off topic I love your Avatar. Tom Baker was my favourite Doctor:cool:
Maybe you can tell me just what this is and how it helps AMD? Not just remind me how stupid I am?
Although i might be totally wrong haha..
Wish it was written in English.
buy buying Seamicro AMD open to new market and new potential income. now microserver customer didnt have much choice for their CPU, mostly microserver vendor use Atom or Xeon CPU from Intel for their product, maybe AMD think..when you have better alternative of Atom CPU is logical to enter market for their CPU buy buying privately own company like Seamicro.
semiaccurate.com/2012/02/29/amd-buys-seamicro-and-what-a-buy-it-is/
This one details more what SeaMicro's were up to...
semiaccurate.com/2012/03/01/why-purchasing-seamicro-was-important-for-amd/
Personally, I think it's a solution to the cries of Facebook, Twitter and the likes... the more Web 2.0 pushes its way into people lives the more they need such type of servers.
BTW, one of SeaMicro's chiefs is one of the original architects of AMD's K8.
At least be humble enough to admit you are not business savvy rather than saying it's dumb because you don't understand the concepts and principles of how businesses operation in the corporate world.
And then they will have allot more cash to spend on r&d. ;)
Dude your comment really did piss me off. I have no idea why you would treat any one like this but it sure is getting a bit much.
Let me ask you just who do you think you are? Do you KNOW me? If not then what is your problem?
Plus, AMD might get some more power saving tech out of this, which would help seeing as they're behind in the die shrink game. And would mean they could compete more. Other bits aside, I'm not entirely sure Intel thought AMD would take this move, or simply don't think it will give AMD enough of an edge with Intel being ahead a die shrink and having so much market share it's a near monopoly. Hopefully this will give AMD an edge and they will gain a good bit of market share so we get better consumer chips too out of the tech spawned from the competition.
I can see AMD making 5 x this little investment in a matter of about 5 to 7 years. That is good business.