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I didn't mean to hit "send" last night. My pre-spellchecked,
truncated text was just meant to wonder if Microsoft would be
cannibalizing their cushy Intel relationships by getting too close
to ARM Holdings (the biz) with a hypothetical acquisition. ARM's
licensees have been eating Intel's lunch for years and I'm sure
Intel would like nothing better than a repeat of what they did to
Alpha (an extremely high quality RISC architecture and set of killer
implementations Intel bought from DEC and promptly buried under a
rock in the bushes in Santa Clara).<br>
<br>
Thanks to Scott for making it clear there is no "bank" in SoftBank.
:-) The article I hadn't yet found that properly covers this story
is from <a
href="http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-07-18/softbank-to-buy-britain-s-arm-for-32-billion-in-record-deal">yesterday's
Bloomberg News</a>. And a Bloomberg headline today reports the
announcement drove SoftBank's stock down over 10%. SoftBank is the
outfit behind the scenes when Sprint unsuccessfully tried to buy T
Mobile. The Japanese honcho of SoftBank responded by declaring
Sprint would be OK without the merger and part of the market's
judgment of this latest acquisition plan is to do with the delta
between what SoftBank asserts and that pesky factor called reality.<br>
<br>
Two other interesting points I found this morning are that
SoftBank's head honcho promised Teresa May (new UK PM) he would
double the head count at ARM in the UK, and that ARM is the 800
pound gorilla of the UK IT industry, accounting for a third of total
capitalization. In other words, the UK's total IT industry equates
to Apple's cash on hand. This is a sad result for the country that
can honestly lay claim to an important chunk of the earliest
computing IP. <br>
<br>
Coincidentally I spent a half a day in Manchester admiring "Baby",
the first stored program computer. Actually, the museum has a
replica built from one of the designer's notebooks. So <a
href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manchester_Small-Scale_Experimental_Machine">this</a>
is a late 1990's take on a 1947 vacuum tube computer that had a 1024
bit electrostatic memory inside what looked like an oscilloscope
CRT. This was Manchester University's experimental system, with a
practical follow-on in the form of the Manchester Mark I coming the
following year. That was commercially produced by Ferranti and beat
Univac I to customer delivery by almost two years. I'll finish by
sharing a picture of a poster pinned behind the Baby replica at the
museum. <br>
<br>
<img src="cid:part3.07000007.01040601@soper.us" alt=""><br>
<br>
-Pete<br>
<br>
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