Intel Buys LSI's Networking Business for $650M update from August 2014
Many Axxia products use processors designed by major Intel rival ARM Holdings.
August 14, 2014
Intel has agreed to pay $650 million in cash to acquire LSI's Axxia Networking Business and related assets from Avago Technologies, which acquired LSI late last year for $6.6 billion. Avago divested LSI's Flash business by selling it to Seagate six months later and has now also gotten rid of Axxia.
The Avago/LSI Axxia chips are used in a variety of products, including PCIe cards which could be then placed inside of systems powered by Intel processors.
Besides gaining the product line and about 650 employees, Intel advances its strategy for mobile and Internet of Things divisions through the acquisition. In a blog post, Rose Schooler, vice president of Intel's Data Center Group and general manager of its Communications and Storage Infrastructure Group, said the acquisition will help the company's wireless access networking strategy, which is focused on the critical network workloads of application, control, data and signal processing. Axxia product lines include custom silicon solutions for mobile and enterprise communication processors, including System-on-Chips (SoCs).
Exactly how Schooler's group takes in the Axxia product line may be interesting. The Axxia Communication processors feature an ARM-based communication processor family. Axxia 5500, launched last year, can have up to 16 ARM cores and uses the ARM CoreLink CCN-504 Cache Coherent Network interconnect. The Axxia enterprise communications processor line features a rich set of SDN capabilities, however its range of products contain ARM-based multicore or PowerPC processors.
ARM is a huge competitor to Intel, especially in the low-power chip markets, such as smartphones and tablets, networking and storage devices, as well as embedded devices. The UK-based company licenses its processor architecture to manufacturers.
Schooler writes that "Intel’s goal is to offer a common architecture approach that scales up and down at many different price, power and performance points."
Intel has incorporated products and intellectual property into its networking business before. When it acquired Fulcrum Technologies in 2011 it folded in its ASICs into a top-of-rack switch and its communication platform.
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