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posted by martyb on Friday June 11 2021, @06:02AM   Printer-friendly
from the if-you-can't-beat-'em,-buy-'em? dept.

Intel (INTC) Reportedly Offers Over $2 Billion To Acquire the Fabless Semiconductor SiFive as the Consolidation Trend in the Industry Is Nowhere Close to Slowing Down

[According] to Bloomberg, Intel has reportedly offered over $2 billion to acquire the fabless semiconductor SiFive, a provider of commercial RISC-V processor IP and silicon solutions based on the RISC-V instruction set architecture.

Should this deal become a reality, it would mark the climax of growing bonhomie between Intel and SiFive. For instance, back in 2018, Intel was one of the participants in the Series C funding round of SiFive. Thereafter, in March 2021, SiFive announced a collaboration with the Intel Foundry Business (IFB) to develop innovative new RISC-V computing platforms.

Of course, unlike legacy Instruction Set Architectures (ISAs), RISC-V's proponents believe that it addresses the skyrocketing cost of designing and manufacturing increasingly complex new chip architectures, given that that the ISA is layered, extensible, and flexible. It is hardly surprising, therefore, that some believe RISC-V to be the future.

Bear in mind that SiFive was last valued at $500 million, as per the data available at PitchBook. This means that Intel would be paying a premium of over 300 percent relative to SiFive's 2020 valuation.

Previously: SiFive HiFive Unleashed Not as Open as Previously Thought
Qualcomm Invests in RISC-V Startup SiFive
SiFive Announces a RISC-V Core With an Out-of-Order Microarchitecture
GlobalFoundries and SiFive Partner on High Bandwidth Memory (HBM2E)
SiFive to Debut a RISC-V PC for Developers in October
SiFive Announces HiFive Unmatched Mini-ITX Motherboard for RISC-V PCs


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday June 11 2021, @06:48PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday June 11 2021, @06:48PM (#1144342)

    the (sane) "consumer" should like intel. the stuff is backwards compatible.
    the producer prefers ARM, 'cause ARM license is easy to get and you can modify to their ..wallets ..err... hearts desire ... mostly so new software doesn't run on old hardware (why do you think you need a new "secure" smart phone every 3 years?)

    intel could not do that (w/ x86) 'cause elephant in room already and would have given much anti-trust ammo if they would have done like ARM.

    we can just hope (!) that this good part of intel (shit that runs on iCore runs on pentium etc etc) bleeds into the RISC V domain (sans the m$ dog-pooh-smell-on the-shoesole).
    we can hope, that is all ...