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To: Process Boy who wrote (89318)10/3/1999 2:00:00 AM
From: Paul Engel  Read Replies (2) of 186894
 
PB & Intel Investors - Here's another "wrinkle" in the 133 MHz FSB and VIA Chip Set deal !

"IBM to second-source chip set licensed from Via"

This soap opera continues to get REALLY interesting !

Maybe Intel now has rights to the VIA chip set since it is cross licensed to IBM !

Paul

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IBM to second-source chip set licensed from Via

By Jack Robertson, Electronic Buyers' News
Oct 1, 1999 (3:10 PM)
URL: ebnews.com

TAIPEI, Taiwan — Via Technologies Inc. has licensed its latest core-logic chip set to IBM Corp., which will serve as a second source for Via and could manufacture the device for use in its own PC lines, sources close to the companies said this week. With the launch of Direct Rambus DRAM and Intel Corp.'s Camino chip set on hold, OEMs are looking for alternatives that include flavors of conventional SDRAM. Though its platform was in the works long before the Rambus delay, IBM's PC division this week threw support to PC133 SDRAM by designing it into its new line of 300PL desktop computers, which also use the latest Apollo Pro133/4X AGP chip set from Via (Taipei, Taiwan).

According to sources, IBM licensed the device from Via and moved to have its microelectronics division begin to manufacture the chip set for captive use. Via said it's also possible that IBM will serve as a second source for the new Apollo Pro 133, joining Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. Ltd., which already makes the device.

Jonathan Chang, Via's vice president of operations and sales, acknowledged the company is negotiating with IBM as a foundry for certain, unspecified chip sets. "We have a test chip set at IBM right now," Chang said, but he declined to confirm that IBM has licensed Via's technology outright for captive use.

Repeated calls to IBM were not returned by press time.

However, sources said the deal gives IBM an assured supply of the 4X AGP chip set version, while opening a wider market for Via until Intel fields a competing PC133-enabled chip set sometime in the first half of 2000.

Danny Lam, an analyst with Fisher-Holstein Inc. (Wilmington, Del.), said the Via-IBM chip set deal will give greater credibility to Via's entire PC133-enabled product line. "PC OEMs that were locked into Intel previously will hesitate less now to adopt the Via PC133 chip set," he said.

Intel this week also handed Via an advantage by introducing Pentium III microprocessors with a 133-MHz frontside bus (FSB). The introduction should clear the air surrounding the legal problems Via encountered this summer when Intel accused it of violating licensing terms by designing its own 133-MHz FSB to interface with Intel processors.

However, now that Intel has released its higher-speed bus, Via needs only to connect its PC133 memory bus and controller with Intel's 133-MHz processor interface, analysts said.

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