To: visionthing who wrote (31382 ) 10/2/1999 2:00:00 AM From: unclewest Respond to of 93625
>i>Uncle--How was your fishing trip? had a great time! probably fish in-shore this weekend...windy. planning to fish islamorada wed and thurs. it is tough duty...but i volunteer for it. i have the dell brochure...ads say: "new rdram technology delivers up to 166% increased memory performance vs. sdram. this adds up to a more realistic internet experience." "cutting-edge technology introducing rdram" "featuring rdram for faster system performance" 3 rambus systems priced at $1779, $2169, and $2959 with monitor and one year of internet access. the dell retail price points will work...much cheaper than i expected. we are sitting on a home run. need intel to pitch the ball. weather delay continues. i think we will find out a lot next week. telephone responses by dell sales people are weak when i try to order a system. dell cannot allow the news blackout to continue...much too embarassing. when the new release date is announced, i will be totally comfortable that the rmbs pc's are thoroughly tested and retested. i realized last night that the samsung story is a news article not a press release. i am disregarding it. rmbs has their explanation posted on their site...i will paste it below. the payoff is 2001-2002...that has not changed imo. in the meantime my gmst and armhy are doing great. and i am fishing. unclewest Monday, September 27, 1999 - Mountain View, California - Rambus Inc. (NASDAQ:RMBS) stated today that they are continuing to work with Intel and PC OEMs on system verification testing of RDRAM©-based platforms. The statements were made in response to published speculation about the system verification testing underway for performance desktop PC platforms using the Intel 820 Chipset. Some issues with platforms supporting three RIMM? module connectors have been identified, and Intel, Rambus and the OEMs are working to quickly resolve them. While the three-connector implementations offer OEMs maximum configuration flexibility, they result in over 1000 permutations of connectors, module designs, frequency grades, optional parity/ECC for system test. The testing has shown that some configurations have issues relating to the combination of the memory system components, module configurations, and motherboard design. "Intel is committed to working with Rambus, the Direct RDRAM? suppliers and its customers to validate the Intel 820 Chipset, and the systems that use it, as soon as possible," said Pete MacWilliams, Intel Fellow. "Intel believes RDRAM is the memory solution that will provide the best performance with today's high-performance microprocessors." "Dell is committed to working with Intel and Rambus to complete the platform validation of RDRAM-based systems," said Carl Everett, senior vice president of Dell Computer Corporation. "Direct RDRAM is a strategic technology to Dell." "Toshiba's commitment to the Rambus-memory architecture has not changed," said Stephen Marlow, vice president of Toshiba America Electronic Components' Memory Business Unit. "We firmly believe that RDRAM provides the optimum solution for high performance PC and Consumer platforms," he added. "When the RDRAM-based platforms are released they will have passed substantial, broad, and rigorous system-level testing. The goal of Rambus and our partners is to provide a solution at a higher quality standard than what occurred at prior memory transitions," said Dave Mooring, senior vice president of Rambus Inc. Rambus Inc. (NASDAQ: RMBS), based in Mountain View, Calif., develops and licenses high-speed chip-to-chip interface technology that enables semiconductor memory devices to keep pace with faster generations of processors and controllers. Providers of Rambus-based integrated circuits include the world's leading DRAM, ASIC and PC controller manufacturers. Currently, eight of the world's top-10 semiconductor companies license Rambus technology. More information on Rambus Inc. and its high-bandwidth interface technology is available at rambus.com .