IBM PowerPC chip designer heads to Apple..but not without a fight

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In case anyone thought that Apple wasn't serious about designing its own chips, some news today might put another nail in that coffin.  According to Tom Krazit over at C|Net, Mark Papermaster, former chip guru at IBM and Vice President of Development, IBM BladeCenter, left IBM to take on a role at Apple. 

Apple's former PowerPC partner, IBM, isn't letting Papermaster go without a fight..

Mark Papermaster, until recently IBM's vice president of microprocessor technology development, plans in early November to join Apple in a position that will see him working closely with Apple CEO Steve Jobs in what IBM believes is an attempt to expand Apple's presence in the markets for servers and chips for handheld devices, according to the copy of a lawsuit filed by IBM against Papermaster. IBM is suing Papermaster to prevent him from joining Apple and divulging trade secrets related to IBM's Power chips and server products, according to the complaint filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York.

IBM issued this statement: "Mr. Papermaster's employment by Apple is a violation of his agreement with IBM against working for a competitor should he leave IBM. We will vigorously pursue this case in court."

 

While Krazit thinks that Papermaster is heading to Apple for its Xserve products (which frankly would be nice), it is interesting to note that while his latest job was with the blade server division, he has a long history of chip development and authoring many papers on PowerPC architecture.

This chip knowledge would be much more valuable to IBM than his blade server management role.  Keep in mind that before PA Semi got bought by Apple a few months back, they were specialists in...wait for it...PowerPC designs.  Could Apple be bringing back the ultra-low power PowerPC for iPhone type equipment?  Why Apple is snapping up all of this PowerPC talent?  We checked his background.. Papermaster has very little to no experience in ARM design.

 

Comments (7)

as this doesn't mean Apple changes course on the Intel base now. I think that switching to Intel has been one of the greatest things Apple has done just to make Windows Virtualization easier and more acceptable by the masses. I though Steve Jobs was crazy when he announced it, but that just proves why he is so great with these things. I have seen the light and it is a nice Apple machine running hardware chips like everyone else, just better.

Ultra-low powered, multiple cored PowerPC/ARM hybrid chips for iPhone / Tablet / PDA / Netbook type equipment, I'm going moist at the possibilities...

why buy up all the power pc knowlegde? especially when snow leopard is rumoured to be going power pc free (or has that one fallen by the way side). Given that the iphone is os x based, wouldn't that make everything way more complicated on the development front?

The kernel is Mach-based and the history shows it to be highly portable. So, no, not "way more" complicated... :-)

we'll see if apple can win this lawsuit. I seriously doubt they will.

Seriously, it's only money. If IBM wins; Apple pays the judgement and they still get who they want.

This is just sour grapes on IBM's part. Apple passed them by and they're bitter, and impotent.