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NVIDIA acquires Mellanox for $6.9 billion

Mellanox

NVIDIA affirmed that it has bought Israeli chip-maker Mellanox for $6.9 billion, its biggest purchase to date. The offer, supposed for a few days, bested a $6 billion offer made by Intel a while back. It will allegedly help NVIDIA better compete in the server market, which represents about 33% of its deals.

Mellanox principally produces chips that control fast ethernet and InfiniBand systems that interface servers. Such items are utilized in server data centers cloud and storage, just as for high performance supercomputers utilized for AI and different kinds of information concentrated registering.

“The emergence of AI and data science, as well as billions of simultaneous computer users, is fueling skyrocketing demand on the world’s datacenters,” said NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang. “Addressing this demand will require holistic architectures that connect vast numbers of fast computing nodes over intelligent networking fabrics to form a giant datacenter-scale compute engine.”

That in turn has increased demand for products from both NVIDIA and Mellanox. “Combining our two companies comes as a natural extension of our longstanding partnership and is a great fit given our common performance-driven cultures,” said Mellanox CEO Eyal Waldman.

With the procurement of Mellanox, NVIDIA will be capable to extend in those zones. The Israeli organization’s innovation is utilized
“in over half of the world’s fastest supercomputers” along with so-called hyper scale datacenters, NVIDIA points out. It includes that remaining tasks at hand in those zones are developing exponentially, yet CPU execution holds backing off in view of Moore’s Law.

That thus has expanded interest for items from both NVIDIA and Mellanox. “Consolidating our two organizations comes as a characteristic augmentation of our longstanding association and is an extraordinary fit given our normal execution driven societies,” said Mellanox CEO Eyal Waldman.

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Image via Reuters