by Anton Shilov
03/06/2006 | 02:44 PM
As expected, in an attempt to boost its presence in “This transaction brings ATI two important elements – presence in a country that is emerging as the next big technology market, and a team of engineers that are highly skilled in our key product areas. The XGI and Macrosynergy people bring additional breadth of knowledge and experience to an ATI team that is leading the graphics processor market,” said Dave Orton, president and chief executive of ATI Technologies. The acquisition will see approximately 100 Shanghai, China-based employees join ATI. An additional cadre of XGI employees in With the acquisition ATI immediately increases its presence in “The GPU business is now at the same level of complexity and consequential cost as the CPU, if not more so. GPU suppliers have the same nanometer race as the CPU companies,” said Jon Peddie, principal analyst at Jon Peddie Research. “With their multi-processor capability they have the same burden of complier development, and they have the same if not more expense in design tools. Then there is the issue of finding not one, not two, but a minimum of three teams, plus leading architects to design the chips. Three teams are needed because the GPU suppliers are on an annual new product cycle (more aggressive than the CPU suppliers) plus mid year spins, and it takes between 24 to 36 months to design a new GPU, so you have to have staggered teams working on the next three parts.” For graphics and multimedia chip designers it is tactically important to have presence in “From a worldwide perspective,