IBM to acquire Transitive
Tuesday, November 18, 2008 - 05:45 PM EDT IBM today announced it plans to acquire Transitive Corporation, a privately held technology company headquartered in Los Gatos, California, with a research and development team in Manchester, United Kingdom. Financial terms were not disclosed.Transitive is a leader in cross-platform virtualization and a pioneer in developing technologies that allow applications written for one type of microprocessor and operating system to run on multiple platforms -- with little or no modification. As a result, the technology will enable customers to consolidate their Linux-based applications onto the IBM systems that make the most sense for their business needs. Transitive's breakthrough technology has earned the company 48 worldwide patents and numerous industry awards. This acquisition is part of IBM's strategy to help clients optimize the efficiency and productivity of their computing infrastructure and improve the utilization of the servers that run them. With this translation technology, along with existing migration capabilities, IBM systems give businesses a faster, easier path for server consolidation to reduce operational expenses, floorspace and energy costs.
Transitive technology is currently included as part of the IBM PowerVM software designed to help customers consolidate their x86 Linux workloads onto IBM Systems. IBM is seeing a growing trend of customers migrating from under-utilized servers to IBM Systems, including onto mainframe and Power Systems. The company is committed to developing additional tools and solutions to make migrations even easier, while minimizing the risk and increasing the financial returns for clients as they consolidate and virtualize to achieve significant business benefit.
Source: IBM
MacDailyNews Note: Rosetta, "the most amazing software you'll never see," is a lightweight dynamic translator for Mac OS X distributed by Apple that enables applications compiled for the PowerPC family of processors to run on Intel-powered Macs without modification. Rosetta is based on Transitive Corporation's QuickTransit technology. See related articles below for more info.

I almost said "What the hell has IBM got to do with Apple anymore" then I read the MacDailyNews Note.
IBM seems to be a good stock pick as a hedge against the hyperinflation going to be caused by "Democrat spending gone wild" that's going to occur over the next couple of years before the public boots their sorry asses out of Congress.
What you all think?
May I remind you the smartest people are working as Hedge Fund managers and the only clueless idiots gets elected for office as seen on the many Congressional CSPAN/CNBC witch hunts going on.