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


To: tejek who wrote (297199)7/28/2006 10:50:59 PM
From: combjelly  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1573695
 
"I mean the actual physical integration"

Oh, that. For me, when you mentioned integration I thought of the concept of integrating the graphics on the CPU.

Well, Hector has a great management team and AMD has improved a lot ever since Hector took over. ATI has some good IP and an excellent engineering staff. Their stuff has always been technically excellent. But project management and drivers have always been their weak point. Now AMD doesn't have a great track record on the software side, so that will be a challenge.

For the rest, from what I know the corporate cultures aren't too divergent. That generally makes integration smoother. I suspect that under AMD, ATI will ditch making their own boards, probably spinning them off. Actually, if they are smart, they will first expand the ATI board portion by adding motherboards. Then get some good industrial design people to do some low profile and small form factor systems like Shuttle does and some barebone notebooks like Asus and MSI, and then spin them off and let the new company keep the ATI brand. While this would create a competitor to their existing customers, it would make the new company more viable and it would give them a way to ensure there are motherboards and systems that implement AMD specific features that often don't get implemented or are implemented as a subset of Intel features, thus compromising their effectiveness. The spun off ATI could be worth a lot if they do it right.

ATI is located in Toronto. I happen to be quite familiar with the area, cost wise it is roughly on par with Houston. There are some great airports close and there are nearby universities to recruit from. The spun off ATI operations would have to coordinate with China and it is somewhat inconveniently located for that. But it isn't a killer.



To: tejek who wrote (297199)7/29/2006 8:09:47 AM
From: Road Walker  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1573695
 
It’s Not the Heat, It’s the Stupidity
By KATHERINE ELLISON
San Anselmo, Calif.

I WENT to see “An Inconvenient Truth” last weekend, but the theater was closed. The power was out because of an overheated transformer. It was Day 9 of our 11-day, record-melting heat wave here in the San Francisco Bay Area, where Mark Twain once supposedly, but probably apocryphally, compared our foggy summer to the coldest winter he’d ever known.

The fog — the Coast’s natural air-conditioner — kept failing to arrive, however, as we sweltered in triple-digit heat. I briefly remembered the single night I’d hated the fog, freezing in extra innings at Candlestick Park. But mostly I recalled the sheer wonder of watching it spill over sun-struck mountains, summer after summer, and I yearned for its return. Where had it gone?

I’d just returned from a week in a Mexican desert to find it several degrees hotter at home, in a marathon that meteorologists have called unprecedented. My 7-year-old’s skin was so warm that I took his temperature. A neighbor had to shut down the emergency sprinkler system at his house, which, sensing fire, was about to douse his furniture. The water scalded his hands.

Inland, where incomes are lower and temperatures normally higher, the elderly and infirm have been quietly dying in their overheated apartments and cars, sometimes slumped in front of running fans. Yesterday, state authorities were blaming the heat for more than 130 deaths.

Certainly, it was nothing compared to the 2003 killer heat wave in Europe, which led to tens of thousands of deaths, and yes, we know that much of the rest of the country is suffering hot weather too. But it was our heat wave, and we hated it just the same. Power failures left hundreds of thousands of Bay Area customers cursing Pacific Gas and Electric in the dark. One repairman reported that his crewmen had just installed a fresh transformer and were taking a break, sipping some Gatorade, when he watched their work explode into sparks.

Local meteorologists offered clashing opinions about why the fog stayed away, but they agreed that the culprits included a mass of warm air that shifted northward from the Four Corners and parked over the Great Basin. Part of this high-pressure air mass extended over California’s coast, tamping down the cool sea breezes. The days were scorching, the nights sticky and hot.

The San Francisco Chronicle published an article headlined “Scientists Split on Heat Wave Cause,” which said some climate experts attributed the heat wave “at least partly” to global climate change. “Others, however, disagree,” the article continued, “and say it’s still too early to blame the current weather on the planet’s changing climate.”

This made me wonder: when will it be too late? I get it that you can’t blame climate change for any one weather event. But I can also see that there’s a pattern emerging — and it sure looks a lot like what mainstream scientists have been predicting for several years. They’ve been warning of more frequent and severe heat waves and warmer nighttime temperatures that rob you of any relief. You don’t really need a climatologist to know which way the wind is blowing.

“It’s so hot,” my friends and I say to one another. “It’s scary.” And we shrug.

“Aren’t you scared?” I asked my husband.

“Sure,” he said, and went back to watching the A’s.

I know he’s mentally healthier than I. Twain, after all, also is supposed to have said that everyone complains about the weather but nobody ever does anything about it. At the time, his comment was pithy and wise. But times have changed: a consensus of leading scientists suggests the world has a chance of stalling climate change if we make deep and immediate reductions in our fossil fuel consumption. This would take some leadership, but I’d put my children in day care and work full time for someone with that kind of vision, and I’d bet parents across the country would do the same.

The fog finally rolled inland on Thursday. But the clock is still tick- ing.

Katherine Ellison is the author of “The Mommy Brain: How Motherhood Makes Us Smarter.’’