SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : RAMBUS (Nasdaq: RMBS) - THE EAGLE -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Glenn Norman who wrote (730)1/21/2000 9:10:00 AM
From: Glenn Norman  Respond to of 2039
 
Yo_"BU$$ER$"............

Re:"New NON-RDRAM Server Chipset"

The following info was PM'ed me by ALEX FLEMING with his permission to post it on this board:

RCC ServerSet III Technology Accelerates New HP VISUALIZE X-Class Personal Workstations

New Workstations Outperform Comparable i840-based Platforms

SANTA CLARA, CA., January 20, 2000--Reliance Computer Corporation (RCC), the leading independent supplier of high-performance core logic for Intel(R)-based servers and workstations, announced that Hewlett-Packard Company has selected the RCC AGP-enhanced ServerSet III WS chipset. HP will use the chipset in its HP VISUALIZE memory architecture, used in its HP VISUALIZE X-Class Personal Workstations announced on January 10, 2000. The new dual-processor-capable workstations incorporate Intel Pentium(R) III processors that operate at speeds up to 800 MHz and feature a fast 133 MHz front-side bus, fed by a fast (133 MHz) and wide (128-bit) PC133 SDRAM main memory system and a fast (66 MHz) and wide (64-bit) PCI bus.

RCC's AGP-enhanced ServerSet III WS chipsets became available in December of 1999. The new core logic chipsets, the first to support fast and wide PCI bus configurations, provide unprecedented bandwidth for today's high-end systems. The HP VISUALIZE X-Class Personal Workstations incorporate two fast and wide (66 MHz/64-bit) PCI slots and four wide (33 MHz/64-bit) PCI slots. The 128-bit wide memory system delivers a peak bandwidth of 2100 MBytes/second using proven and cost-effective PC133 SDRAM technology. HP's workstations will accommodate up to eight memory DIMMs and up to 8 GBytes of ECC main memory, far more than other Intel-based workstations that utilize Intel's 440BX, 440GX or 840 core logic technology.

"Our customers rely on HP to help master increasingly complex technical-computing requirements," said Jim Zafarana, worldwide marketing manager for HP's Technical Computing Division. "Our engineers determined that memory latency plays a key role in achieving optimum performance for most technical applications, and we sought a technology solution that minimized this latency. The RCC ServerSet III WS supports low-latency PC133 SDRAM, and the results speak for themselves. According to an industry-standard application benchmark, APC Pro/ENGINEER, the new HP VISUALIZE X-Class Personal Workstation with a 733 MHz processor and award-winning HP VISUALIZE fx6+ graphics outpaces competing Intel Pentium III-based systems that use the Intel 840 chipset by 19 percent(1)."

"HP's VISUALIZE memory architecture displays HP's inventiveness when it comes to technology and packaging," commented David Pulling, RCC's vice president of marketing and sales. "HP's engineers and ours were in complete agreement regarding the performance advantages that the incorporation of low latency PC133 SDRAM into HP's VISUALIZE memory architecture can offer for large memory-footprint applications. Our 128-bit memory controller delivers more bandwidth and lower latencies than alternative technologies, at a far lower cost per megabyte."


NOW....."HERE'S THE REST OF THE STORY" (as Paul Harvey would say):

When I (ALEX FLEMING) looked at the information on HPs website with regard performance, they quote a comparison against the 840. In reality the differences in performance were due to different graphics cards so it was not really a good example of a match up between the two chipsets.
The graphics card they used had SIX!!! PA-RISC chips handling geometry processing...not a fair fight.


Alex told me he was going to be testing one of these machines (RCC Sever Set III) against a Intel 840 on a "EQUAL" basis and would let me know the outcome in the near future.

Thanks ALEX, we need all the info we can get to base our investments in RAMBU$ on.

Salude - Norman



To: Glenn Norman who wrote (730)1/21/2000 9:45:00 AM
From: jetcityrandy  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 2039
 
Glenn,

I truly enjoy your exuberant enthusiasm.
redundantly yours,
randy

We shall see if Zeev's 80 holds today.
Since it IS an options expiry Friday, I won't place to much emphasis on todays close. Unless the volume is over 5 million. <g>



To: Glenn Norman who wrote (730)1/21/2000 11:26:00 AM
From: Glenn Norman  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2039
 
Yo_"BU$$ER$"...............

Re:Market Ramifications of RAMBU$ Lawsuit

I am going to post the news release of this lawsuit in its full context with some bold highlights by me. I keep reading and re-reading this story and I am ovewhelmed by its market implications on RAMBU$ - - am I missing something? - - does anyone else see something that I don't?

Rambus sues Hitachi--will others be next?
By Michael Kanellos
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
January 18, 2000, 5:25 p.m. PT

Memory designer Rambus has filed a lawsuit against Hitachi for patent infringement, a move that could end up spreading across wide segments of the semiconductor industry.

Mountain View, Calif.-based Rambus filed an action in the Federal District Court in Delaware which alleges that Hitachi unlawfully incorporated Rambus' intellectual property into the designs of a large number of Hitachi memory chips and microprocessors, according to company executives. Rambus is seeking an injunction, as well as punitive damages.

Hitachi could not be reached for comment.

The circumstances of the suit indicate that Hitachi isn't likely to be the only company hit by some sort of legal action or request for royalties. Conceivably, Rambus could eventually file similar, although perhaps less bitter, suits against any company that made SDRAM memory (synchronous dynamic random access memory), or products that "interface" with computer memory, during the past 10 years. Such a list could include Samsung, Micron Technologies, Infineon, IBM and Intel.

Rambus, in fact, has already opened negotiations with some companies about licensing deals that would effectively bring about a settlement of any claims.

"We believe we have some fundamental synchronous memory technology intellectual property," said Avo Kanadjian, vice president of worldwide marketing for Rambus. "We are talking to a number of companies," he said.

Kanadjian declined to identify any of the companies. "We are in discussions, and we do prefer settlement."

The legal action springs from the vagaries of Rambus' history and the inner workings of patent law. The four patents involved in the suit were awarded to Rambus in 1999. However, they all date back for legal purposes to April 1990, when Rambus filed for its patents, Kanadjian said.

The industry's effort to promote SDRAM, meanwhile, didn't get kicked off until late 1991, he stated, while SDRAM chips didn't start rolling out until 1993. Rambus claims it showed its technology to Hitachi in the mid-90s and proposed a licensing agreement. Hitachi then incorporated this technology, according to the complaint and Kanadjian, into 100-MHz SDRAM and 133-MHz SDRAM chips as well as its SH family of microprocessors.

"Our business model is to develop intellectual property to license to others. We believe that Hitachi has used our intellectual property to develop non-Rambus products," he said.

Hitachi eventually took out a limited license with Rambus, but one that doesn't cover these products. Hitachi has never made Rambus parts.

Although Hitachi's actions, if true, seem calculated, Rambus does not have to show that to sustain a claim, which is why the suit has broader implications. Under the "prior art" doctrine of patent law, the date of the initial patent determines whether or not liability exists. If a second company develops identical or similar technology without access or knowledge of the original patents, the second company can still be held liable only because its invention came later.

Other technology companies, in effect, could have unwittingly infringed upon the patents. This list could include not only memory makers but also processor manufacturers, "motherboard" makers and chipset makers. Ironically, many companies have license agreements with Rambus, but most are relatively limited in scope. Lawsuits are dreaded in Silicon Valley, but Kanadjian stated that such suits are a fact of life. Rambus is one of a number of "IP" semiconductor companies that only make money if they can license their technology to larger, established companies, he said.

"I don't think these suits are filed without significant material to back them up," Kanadjian said. "I don't know of any company that doesn't respect intellectual property."


If RAMBU$ has even a PARTIAL VICTORY in this suit, the implications and huge market impact are mind boggling, even if RAMBU$ loses the suit in its entirety the market for its memory will still exist until something is invented to replace their technology. And this suit will put othe memory designers on notice that their designs had damn well not INFRINGE on any RAMBU$ IP!!

WHAT AM I MISSING HERE????? WHY AREN'T WE TRADING AT $200????

Salude - Norman

P.S. Most all of the trades you are seeing less than 50 shares this morning are friends and relatives of mine!!!<ggg>

yahoo.cnet.com



To: Glenn Norman who wrote (730)1/23/2000 3:04:00 AM
From: Alan Hume  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 2039
 
Hi Norman,

"I have given a lot of thought to the lawsuit filing and I agree with you 100%, BUT WHY IS IT NOT PLAYED UP BY THE NEWS MEDIA MORE?"

Last weekend I attended a VectorVest seminar in Tampa (fantastic, btw, but that's another story)At this seminar were approx 250 persons who buy hold and sell stocks on a regular basis. During the 3 days and 4 nights I spent there, I spoke with many people. I met just ONE SINGLE person who had even heard of RMBS.
This made me realise that us "oldtimers" have become too involved in RMBS, and see it out of proportion with the real world. No matter on what we may believe for the future, right now RMBS is an almost unknown 3 year old low cap company with a small float. It`s not an Internet with high expenses, low revenue and big plans. It's a company who owns the Interlectual Property which allows a specifically designed DRAM to run at higher speeds than is currently normal.
RMBS is a stock for "techies", who understand a little where the industry is at, what makes it tick and where it may go in the future. There are very few punters out there who are techies and invest long term in their beliefs. The few who do, are far far more sucessful than the rest, but that is (yet another) story.
Sorry to disappoint you, but for the average punter, the DRAM is a number It's either 32 (is that still around?) , 64 (standard on low end boxes), or 128 (for upgrades)
Hardly anyone out there knows(or even cares) the difference between an SRAM and a DRAM, let alone EDODRAM to SDRAM to DRDRAM to DDRDRAM to SLDRAM.
So why should RMBS filing against Hitachi make big news in the media? It's not like INTC against VIA or MU against Korea Inc. These are visible companies with jobs and prestege involved.
Lastly, what I fail to understand is, why should RMBS go to $1000 on a favorable ruling?. That is parallel to saying that Hitachi has been holding RMBS down all this time. And I don't consider that to be the case.

Alan