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To: Uncle Frank who wrote (7282)10/1/1999 11:04:00 AM
From: JohnG  Respond to of 54805
 
Another early Rambus investor earning his risk premium.
JohnG
To: Dave B who wrote (31340)
From: Randy R. Felt
Friday, Oct 1 1999 10:19AM ET
Reply # of 31349

I have RAMBUS on my back, and I don't know what to do.

Get me to the Betty Ford Rambus wing quick.



To: Uncle Frank who wrote (7282)10/1/1999 11:28:00 AM
From: Ruffian  Respond to of 54805
 
Samsung halts production of Rambus
memory chips
By Michael Kanellos
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
September 30, 1999, 6:05 p.m. PT

Now that PCs using Rambus memory are delayed, Samsung has halted production
of the new type of memory chips until the recent problems are solved.

Samsung, which has made more Rambus memory chips than anyone else to date, said
that the suspension of manufacturing is a direct result of Intel's decision earlier this week
to delay the release of its 820 chipset, the part that will allow Pentium III processors to
"speak" to the next-generation memory.

Computers using the 820 and faster Rambus memory were expected this week. Recently
discovered errata, or bugs, held up the release, which caught many by surprise. HP, for
example, trotted out a PC with Rambus to reporters and analysts only a few days before
the delay.

Although the suspension throws a wrench into Samsung's business plans, the problem is
worsened by the open-ended nature of the delay.
Some observers have speculated that the problem
could be fixed in a month, but Intel has not estimated
how long the problem might take to fix.

Samsung and other memory manufacturers pay
Rambus royalties when they sell Rambus chips to
computer makers. It's unknown how much Samsung's
decision to shut off production will hurt Rambus
revenues.

"The delay has got us concerned. We would very
much like to see a new launch date," said Avo
Kanadjian, senior vice president of memory marketing
at Samsung, adding that the company will not
resume production until a release date is set.

"Until the problem is fully understood, any fix is pure conjecture. We think that a quarter
[three-month] delay is realistic, and a six-month delay is not out of the realm of
possibility," wrote Ashok Kumar, semiconductor analyst with US Bancorp Piper Jaffray in
a report yesterday. "Regardless of the cost and fix, both Intel and Rambus will find it hard
to recover the credibility that they have lost by uncovering this problem so close to the
announcement."

Samsung, of course, is not the only company hit by the delay. Computer companies have
already designed and manufactured Rambus PCs, which can't be sold at the moment.
Motherboard makers will have to also go back to the drawing board.

"We estimate that this snafu has cost the industry about $10 million. (100,000
motherboards at $100)," Kumar continued.

On what might be the only positive note in the Rambus saga these days, Kanadjian
pointed out that the recent surge in price of standard computer memory has reduced the
premium on similar Rambus devices. The price of Rambus memory has been a major
complaint of PC manufacturers.