Report: Apple Switching to Intel Chips

By The Associated Press 
12:21 AM EDT Mon. Jun. 06, 2005 
A stormy, decade-long relationship between Apple Computer and IBM is
over, according to published reports. 
Apple CEO Steve Jobs is expected to announce Monday morning at the
company's software developers conference in San Francisco that Apple will
discontinue using microprocessor chips made by IBM in favor of Intel
chips, according to CNET Networks' News.com and The Wall Street Journal. 
Officials from Apple, Intel and IBM could not be reached Sunday to
confirm the report. 
For years, rumors of Apple's wish to jump to Intel have been circulating.
But two weeks ago, analysts were skeptical when The Wall Street Journal
reported that Intel and Apple were in negotiations. 
One reason for the skepticism is that the move represents a significant
risk for Cupertino, Calif.-based Apple. 
Switching to Intel's x86 chips would force Apple's programmers to rewrite
its software in order to adapt to the new processor. 
"I don't know that Apple's market share can survive another architecture
shift," Insight 64 analyst Nathan Brookwood told News.com. "Every time
they do this, they lose more customers." 
News.com reported that Apple would begin the transition to Intel with its
lower-end computers, such as the Mac mini, in mid-2006 and higher-end
models a year later. 
Apple's break with IBM stemmed from Jobs' wish that IBM make a larger
variety of the PowerPC processors used in Macintosh systems. IBM balked
because of concerns over the profitability of a low-volume business,
News.com reported. 
By wrestling away Apple's business from IBM, Intel tightens its
stranglehold on the PC processor business. The company holds more than an
80 percent share of the market. 
Although IBM suffers a setback with the loss of Apple, the company could
reap a financial windfall from deals with Microsoft, Nintendo and Sony.
to put microprocessors it is producing in next-generation video-game
consoles. 
A new microprocessor that IBM co-developed with Sony and Toshiba,
code-named Cell and planned for Sony's next PlayStation console, is being
touted as capable of delivering 10 times the performance of today's PC
processors.

Jeff Slyn, Owner
SLYN Systems & Peripherals
(502) 426-5469
serving Kentuckiana clients 7 days a week since 1985!
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