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Enterprise Mobility Technology Pundits: Intel Buys Wind River, does Microsoft buy AMD?
Jun 4, 2009 – By Rob Enderle

When vendors expend out of their core areas they often drop into the space occupied by a partner. Right now Oracle is moving into hardware by buying Sun which may have both HP and Dell treat them vastly differently as a result putting large chunks of revenue at risk. This is part of the hidden cost of an acquisition.

Intel vs. Microsoft: Building a War

Intel and Microsoft aren't very close, in fact for those of us that watch them, the two firms generally appear on the brink of all out war from time to time. Their last secret collaboration that has become public had to do with the Windows Vista launch, adjusting the bar for Vista Ready certification to include Intel's low end products and all of this resulted in a massive class action law suit. Microsoft has been, like Apple, quietly building a chip competency center and the recent Xbox processor was a co-designed by Microsoft and IBM.

Intel has been actively supporting Linux and has their own Linux distribution called Moblin which has had some success. These efforts, until now, annoyed Microsoft but did not appear to lead to open conflict. The acquisition of Wind River may push Microsoft too far.

Wind River: A Bridge Too Far?

Wind River is one of the major powers in the embedded software space and a recognized competitor to Microsoft. These two companies in the embedded space are actually rather closely matched at the moment and this is a strategic market for Microsoft. By buying a primary Microsoft competitor Intel, in effect, becomes a primary Microsoft competitor and that should change some things. Granted it wouldn't be as bad as if they bought Google, or Red Hat, but the cold war between the two companies now could escalate into open conflict much more easily.

Will Microsoft buy AMD?

Unlikely but this is now the path that Intel and Microsoft may be on. Once into the software business you are either all in or your acquisition fails and these things have less than a 20% chance of success. This means that Intel will likely have to double down and their next acquisitions will push them farther and farther into Microsoft's business and Microsoft should then have to use AMD and NVIDIA increasingly as a competitive block.

The cost of this conflict could make the battles between AMD and Intel look trivial in hindsight because we are talking big players here each of which has showcased unprecedented power and tendencies to act first and think later.

Intel took a big shot at Redmond when they moved to buy Wind River, now we are just waiting for Redmond to Respond.

Courtesy Technology Pundits.



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