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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Jim McMannis who wrote (63766)6/29/1999 11:18:00 PM
From: Joey Smith  Respond to of 1575775
 
According to Intel, Via does NOT absorb any CYRIX licenses with Intel. I hope Via
has MILLIONS to pay for lawyers as well <gg>
joey

Message 10324320

Tuesday June 29, 8:56 pm Eastern Time

National Semi seen close to selling Cyrix to Via

By Therese Poletti

SAN FRANCISCO, June 29 (Reuters) - National Semiconductor Corp. has reached
an agreement to sell its money-losing Cyrix PC processor business to Via Technologies
Inc., a Taiwanese maker of chip sets, and a deal could be announced as early as
Wednesday, an industry source said.

''They have reached an agreement in principle,'' said one industry source who asked not
to be identified. ''I expect they will announce it soon, probably as early as tomorrow.''

The value of the deal was not immediately available.

A spokesman for National Semiconductor (NYSE:NSM - news), based in Santa Clara,
Calif., said the company remained in talks with several companies, including Via, to sell
part of Cyrix and that the deadline for bids is Wednesday, June 30.

He declined to comment any further.

In May, bruised by an ongoing price war with Intel Corp. (Nasdaq:INTC - news) and
Advanced Micro Devices Inc. (NYSE:AMD - news), National Semiconductor
announced that it would exit the PC processor business by selling part of Cyrix.

When it reported its fourth quarter earnings earlier this month, National Semiconductor
said that if it did not receive any bids by June 30, it would shut down Cyrix's PC
business.

Cyrix is a maker of Intel-compatible chips that National Semiconductor purchased in
1997 for $550 milllion. But National Semiconductor plans to keep Cyrix's chips for
information appliances like set-top boxes.

National Semiconductor also put its South Portland, Maine chip-making plant up for
sale. The source said that Via, which has U.S. offices in Fremont, Calif., is not, for now,
buying National's plant, but it is one of a few companies bidding for it.

The Colorado design center, where Cyrix develops its MediaGX chips used in
appliances, Web pad devices and Windows terminals, will stay as part of National
Semiconductor, the source said.

''It sounds like they are going to do a deal,'' said Nathan Brookwood, a principal at
Insight 64, a consulting firm in Saratoga, Calif. ''Merely turning off the business would
have a level of expense associated with it. Via understands that.''

''Via is a totally rational buyer,'' said David Creamer, a managing director at Broadview
International Llc, in Foster City, Calif. ''No one is going to be interested in playing in this
market... They (Via) have done a decent job competing against Intel in core logic chip
sets.''

Chip sets are a group of chips that are designed to perform other functions around the
processor. Via has a cross-license with Intel for its P6 bus architecture, which enables
the company to make chip sets for Intel Pentium processor line.

Just last week, the chip giant sued Via, alleging patent infringement, breach of contract
and unfair business practices. Santa Clara, Calif.-based Intel said Via was causing
market confusion by saying it had rights to products it did not.

Chuck Mulloy, an Intel spokesman, said that if Via bought Cyrix it would not
have rights
to the long-standing cross licensing agreement between Intel and National.

''If Cyrix is sold, the rights do not transfer,'' he said.


A spokesman for Via in Fremont said the company has not yet commented on the Intel
lawsuit. He also declined to comment on its ongoing talks with National. ''I've heard the
same rumors,'' he said.