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That's probably true. AMD also theoretically has a leg up on Intel in terms of integration given that their entire CPU portfolio is based on chiplets - adding an FPGA or two into the mix for an embedded EPYC or similar product series would probably be relatively easy.And most importantly telecom and high-speed networking. I think AMD is after that 5G infrastructure sweet pie, since xilinx already has a decent portfolio of comms&accelerator solutions.
As for why they're looking at this in a broader perspective, I think AMD is seeing significant growth but are also seeing the limits of the X86 CPU + GPU/compute accelerator market, and want to diversify. Makes sense business wise, though there is definitely a need to not over-reach when doing something like this. Buying a company worth between 1/3 and 1/4 of your own? That's defintely a big ask. Though that should also mean buying into a solid source of revenue, of course, and as such it should pay for itself in time even if left to its own devices (as long as the interest on the loans needed to buy isn't egregious).
Given the way Intel has been gobbling up companies left and right for the past decade, I think we need someone else of a similar size to balance things out and avoid Intel entirely cementing themselves as the one-stop-shop for all enterprise compute solutions. (No, I don't think NvidiARM+Mellanox quite does that, as ARM's main business is (still) consumer chips.)