
Hassam Nasir Social Links Navigation Contributing Writer Hassam Nasir is a die-hard hardware enthusiast with years of experience as a tech editor and writer, focusing on detailed CPU comparisons and general hardware news. When he’s not working, you’ll find him bending tubes for his ever-evolving custom water-loop gaming rig or benchmarking the latest CPUs and GPUs just for fun.
hotaru251 tin foil hat possibility: now they have incentive for their product to work better w/ intel. Reply
-Fran- hotaru251 said: tin foil hat possibility: now they have incentive for their product to work better w/ intel. That is not a "tinfoil hat" thing, but mere economics. Or as others call it: "conflict of interests against free market". Line must go up! Rgards. Reply
TerryLaze Admin said: after the U.S. government had invested its own $8.9 billion into Intel. That's a very weird way of putting it since the gov extorted those shares for the money they had already promised to intel from the CHIPS act. hotaru251 said: tin foil hat possibility: now they have incentive for their product to work better w/ intel. So what's the difference?! They always had incentive for their product to work better with the CPU that is in like 90% of x86 PCs. Or at least was, and we didn't see any change in how well nvidia runs with AMD in the last few years where we saw more AMD cpus in PCs. Reply
ezst036 It would be quite interesting if Nvidia ended up buying out Intel in total. I'm sure we are a long way from that but still. That would be crazy if it happened. Reply
TerryLaze ezst036 said: It would be quite interesting if Nvidia ended up buying out Intel in total. I'm sure we are a long way from that but still. That would be crazy if it happened. The FTC didn't allow nvidia to buy arm and had to allow even this transaction. There is no way the FTC would allow a full buy out. (to nvidia) Reply
ezst036 TerryLaze said: The FTC didn't allow nvidia to buy arm and had to allow even this transaction. There is no way the FTC would allow a full buy out. (to nvidia) Perhaps they should. Otherwise the FTC might just be setting everybody up for more failure and another bailout. Intel should not receive another bailout, if they can't get their act together then they need to sell themselves off to a capable entity. Time to die. (I don't really like Nvidia but they are capable.) Reply
TerryLaze ezst036 said: Perhaps they should. Otherwise the FTC might just be setting everybody up for more failure and another bailout. Intel should not receive another bailout, if they can't get their act together then they need to sell themselves off to a capable entity. Time to die. (I don't really like Nvidia but they are capable.) Another?! Which one do you think was the first?! CHIPS wasn't a bail out, not for intel at least, it was to incentivize companies to keep or create more work in the USA, so you could call it a bail out for the gov. but then they turned around and stole shares for that money, a hostile takeover is not a bail out. Reply
Bigshrimp More circular investments. Seems like no real new money is being generated, just spending on each other's companies. Basically taking money from one company, giving it to another, then that company gives it to another company, and the circle continues. Reply
Key considerations
- Investor positioning can change fast
- Volatility remains possible near catalysts
- Macro rates and liquidity can dominate flows
Reference reading
- https://www.tomshardware.com/tech-industry/SPONSORED_LINK_URL
- https://www.tomshardware.com/tech-industry/nvidia-gives-intel-a-lifeline-with-usd5-billion-common-stock-deal-september-deal-gets-ftc-approval-for-more-than-217-4-million-intel-shares-at-usd23-28-per-share#main
- https://www.tomshardware.com
- Tech modder transformed phone into his own foldable, portable Cyberdeck with integrated keyboard, speakers, and USB hub — portable PC crammed inside 3D-printed
- NVIDIA Awards up to $60,000 Research Fellowships to PhD Students
- Linux's contemporary filesystem mount API went without documentation for six years — latest man-page package finally adds content for 2019 code
- Chinese memory maker CXMT prepares $4.2 billion USD IPO to take advantage of tight memory market — company lays out path to profitability as DRAM demand skyrock
- Nvidia's CUDA Tile examined: AI giant releases programming style for Rubin, Feynman, and beyond — tensor-native execution model lays the foundation for Blackwel
Informational only. No financial advice. Do your own research.