+

Cookies on the Business Insider India website

Business Insider India has updated its Privacy and Cookie policy. We use cookies to ensure that we give you the better experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we\'ll assume that you are happy to receive all cookies on the Business Insider India website. However, you can change your cookie setting at any time by clicking on our Cookie Policy at any time. You can also see our Privacy Policy.

Close
HomeQuizzoneWhatsappShare Flash Reads
 

How your iMessages and Amazon purchases are driving the tech megadeal frenzy

Oct 26, 2015, 18:50 IST

Microsoft

Storage-hardware maker Western Digital announced on Wednesday it will buy flash memory giant SanDisk for $19 billion.

Advertisement

It's just the latest multi-billion dollar deal in the tech industry this year, following Intel's takeover of Altera, Avago's acquisition of Broadcom, and Dell's $67 billion takeover of EMC.

What's behind many of these transactions are huge shifts in the way we capture and store data - be it cell phone data, ecommerce data, or any other computer data.

Companies are looking to buy what they don't already build, and the changes mean big tech deals are going to keep coming.

Where your iMessages live

It's all about data.

Advertisement

For years, computer data was stored on hard disk drives, which have a CD-like rotating disk. Western Digital, Seagate, and Toshiba all make these.

But that technology is being displaced, and companies that pioneered it are watching sales struggle as less-bulky flash memory chips, like those used in phones, become the norm.

One type of flash memory chip is called a NAND chip, and you can find it today in memory cards, USB drives, and "solid state" drives (which look a bit like disk drives on the outside but have no disk or other moving parts on the inside). SanDisk makes these.

So, Western Digital went out and bought its way into the flash memory market by acquiring SanDisk.

Flickr/Jon Ross

Advertisement

Dell's megadeal has a similar rationale behind it.

By acquiring EMC, a data storage company, Dell is taking a big step toward cutting its reliance on personal computers - not to mention moving into the smarter data storage market.

What about 'the cloud'?

You may have heard that "cloud computing" is disrupting traditional data storage.

Yes, the cloud - meaning a network of data-storage and processing servers that are hosted on the internet instead of on local servers or computers - is part of the story.

Public cloud providers like Amazon Web Services or Microsoft Azure are also moving towards solid state technologies for their own facilities.

Advertisement

And it all leads to tech company mergers.

More deals are coming

Going forward, we may see more flash memory chip makers - like Micron, Hynix, or even Samsung or Intel - coming together with one of Western Digital's disk drive competitors, like Seagate.

The shift is driven by the need to continue capturing, storing and analyzing a growing amount of data.

Seen in that light, this story is not just about old technology coming together with newer technology. It's about finding ways to continue providing cheap data services that we all use.

That's important for everyone.

Advertisement

It means entrepreneurs can launch start-ups more cheaply, using more efficient data storage services. It means large-scale companies can cut down on costs. And it means you can continue to back up your iPhone inexpensively.

NOW WATCH: WHERE ARE THEY NOW? Here's What Happened To The 'Dude You're Getting A Dell' Guy

Please enable Javascript to watch this video
You are subscribed to notifications!
Looks like you've blocked notifications!
Next Article