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Intel Buys McAfee

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What's a hardware company going to do in a cloud world? Catching most industry observers unaware, Intel will purchase of all of McAfee’s common stock for $48 per share in cash, a $7.68 billion deal.

McAfee, which has enjoyed double-digit, year-over-year growth and nearly 80% gross margins last year, will be run as a wholly-owned subsidiary, reporting into Intel’s Software and Services Group.Intel Buys McAfee This acquisition, says Intel, "enables a combination of security software and hardware from one company to ultimately better protect consumers, corporations and governments as billions of devices - and the server and cloud networks that manage them - go online."

But it will also raise concerns about the power Intel will wield if it promotes McAfee with its OEM sales. Think of Microsoft-with-Internet-Explorer as a type of unfair bundle that governments will be looking for.

Security companies, competitors to McAfee, are probably shaking at the possibilities of Intel's concept of hardware-enhanced security. Unlike many acquistions that trigger related acquisitions, it leaves them with few options...AMD? ARM? Very unlikely... 

Intel states: "The acquisition reflects that security is now a fundamental component of online computing. Today’s security approach does not fully address the billions of new Internet-ready devices connecting, including mobile and wireless devices, TVs, cars, medical devices and ATM machines as well as the accompanying surge in cyber threats. Providing protection to a diverse online world requires a fundamentally new approach involving software, hardware and services." Meanwhile the company has elevated  security to be on par with its strategic focus areas in energy-efficient performance and Internet connectivity.
 
Intel’s Software and Services Group is managed by Renée James, Intel senior vice president, and general manager of the group.
 
“Hardware-enhanced security will lead to breakthroughs in effectively countering the increasingly sophisticated threats of today and tomorrow,” says James. “This acquisition is consistent with our software and services strategy to deliver an outstanding computing experience in fast-growing business areas, especially around the move to wireless mobility.”
 
“McAfee is the next step in this strategy, and the right security partner for us,” she adds. “Our current work together has impressive prospects, and we look forward to introducing a product from our strategic partnership next year.”

The above comment regarding a product introduction implies the two were already working on a project and that project may indeed have kicked off the acquistion discussions.

McAfee, based in Santa Clara and founded in 1987, is the world’s largest dedicated security technology company with approximately $2 billion in revenue in 2009. With its approximately 6100 employees, McAfee will join Intel's workforce to jointly explore future product concepts to further strengthen security in the cloud network and myriad of computers and devices people use in their everyday lives.

Watch the video, see the release

Last Updated on Thursday, 19 August 2010 16:28
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Sonic Buys DivX for $320 Million

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Sonic will buy DivX for about $320 million in cash and stock . Both businesses want to evolve past the future death of the DVD, today's mainstay for both companies.

Sonic purchased CinemaNow, a pioneer in the movie-download business, and now Best Buy and Blockbuster use Sonic's platform for video service.

Sonic says DivX will bring a more extensive solution for internet video delivery and proven tools for content prep in "the cloud," video playback, and Hollywood-approved DRM.

Go Sonic Buys DivX, Not Everybody Happy

Last Updated on Tuesday, 06 July 2010 20:53
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Cloud Gaming to Change Retail Market

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On the eve of E3 in America, some game publishers think retail fails to support boxed PC games.

By refusing to stock certain games (and moving PC titles to the back of the store), retail inadvertently pushes publishers into digital distribution...

Go More on Cloud Gaming

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Google OS Good to Go

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Start up a computer as fast as a TV can be turned on.

Google's new OS uses speed as its main entry point against Microsoft (and Apple). But it's real battle may lay with Qualcomm and others who seek to define netbook, MIDs and smartphone OS.

Here's a chart that illustrates FastBoot versus traditional PC boot.

Chromium OS FastBoot

Chrome OS resembles a web browser more than Windows and will be available on low-cost netbooks that meet Google's hardware specs (memory chips to store data instead of slower HDDs.) Those netbooks (let's call them "web browsing machines") running Chrome OS will only be able to run web apps and the user's data will automatically be stored in the Google cloud.

Google is now open-sourcing the project as Chromium OS (yes, the code is free).

Go Chromium OS

Last Updated on Tuesday, 29 June 2010 15:19
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When Windows 7 is Hard to Swallow…

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Go on, Microsofties, stuff yourself with an "Amerikanbanzu."

Tokyo's Burger King sells a Windows 7 Whopper stacked with 7 beef patties (total 1.75 pounds or .8 kg.)

whopper7 victim

A promotion by Burger King Japan and Microsoft, the "super giant" burger measures 5.1" in diameter. The 7-layered Windows 7 Whopper costs--of course--777 yen (US$ 8.49) for the first 30 customers; the regular price is US$15.84 (1450 yen).

Harder-to-swallow: the rumour Apple is developing the Leopard Burger--a bigger, tastier, healthier burger. It would be more expensive but easier to digest.

Go Windows 7 Whopper Claims First Victim

Last Updated on Friday, 25 June 2010 17:03
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