ARM Downplays Apple Acquisition Rumor
ARM CEO Warren East attempts to quiet rumors that Apple is considering buying ARM which makes processors used in the Apple iPhone. ARM's business model is already a great way to access its technology, East says.
If Apple-related
rumors were bad news for Samsung at the start of the week, for chip
designer ARM Holdings they worked to drive
stock prices up.
Rumors that Apple may be considering purchasing ARM-which
currently makes chips for the Apple iPhone-drove ARM
stock to an eight-year high, the Guardian
reported April 22.
Responding to the rumors, ARM executives
argued that given the current relationship between the companies, there wasn't
any need for Apple to front the money for an acquisition.
"Exciting though it is to have the share price pushed up by these
rumors," ARM CEO
Warren East told the Guardian, "common sense tells us that our standard
business model is an excellent way for technology companies to gain access to
our technology. Nobody has to buy the company."
On April 19, the Korea Times reported that Apple planned to make its own
application processors, or APs, for the next generation of iPhones.
Quoting a "high-ranking industry executive," the paper reported:
"iPhones have been using Samsung Electronics-produced APs that were
partially designed by Apple engineers. But Apple has decided to use its own AP
for its 4G models."
If Apple does indeed have such plans, it's likely that PA Semi, the
processor-design company that Apple purchased in 2008, would make the
processors.
In June Apple
is expected to refresh the iPhone 3G S currently offered in the United
States by AT&T, and rumors suggest that Apple may also be at work on a CDMA
(Code Division Multiple Access)-based version for Verizon Wireless, once
AT&T's exclusivity contract expires. Verizon's CEO
has reportedly suggested that the company would like a 4G version, compatible
with its planned LTE technology, but
that decision is up to Apple.
The "4G model" referred to by the Korea Times may have shown its face
in public sooner than Apple intended. In mid-April, an Apple engineer
reportedly left a mobile device in a German beer garden north of San
Jose, Calif. The device was
quickly sold to tech site Gizmodo,
which posted photos of the alleged iPhone 4G.








