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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Jim McMannis who wrote (123723)9/11/2000 7:29:58 PM
From: Elmer  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1580019
 
Jimbo, has this been poster over here yet?

"Compaq should thrive on the market's overall growth, especially now that the company has regained its top position in retail, Young said. "There's clearly evidence that Compaq is executing well," he said.

The top-selling models of Compaq, Young noted, all are powered by chips from Intel (Nasdaq: INTC), which won't please the Advanced Micro Devices (NYSE: AMD) fedayeen that populate ZDNet message boards.

"It's really a huge Intel bet that Compaq is making," Young said. "Getting completely behind Intel on the Celeron product and the Pentium III, rather than AMD, seems to have paid off big-time for Compaq."

zdii.com

EP



To: Jim McMannis who wrote (123723)9/11/2000 8:02:53 PM
From: jim kelley  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1580019
 
Earth to ...annis

Message received, suppository deposited. <G>



To: Jim McMannis who wrote (123723)9/11/2000 10:56:57 PM
From: tejek  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1580019
 
Rambus countersues Micron, Hyundai in patent case


MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif., Sept 11 (Reuters) - In the latest round of patent litigation among three top semiconductor companies, Rambus Inc. <RMBS.O> said on Monday it filed suit in Europe against two rivals who had already sued it in the United States.

In a statement, Mountain View, Calif.-based Rambus, a specialist in memory chip design, said it sued semiconductor maker Micron Technology Inc. <MU.N> in Germany and France after failing to negotiate an intellectual property (IP) license to technology that speeds performance of microchips.

Micron preempted licensing talks this past August by filing a U.S. lawsuit against Rambus, alleging Rambus violated antitrust laws.

Rambus said it holds a European patent for technology used in Micron's SDRAM and DDR SDRAM memory devices, and that it is seeking injunctions to halt the sale, manufacture and use of those devices.

Rambus also filed suit in France and Germany against Hyundai Electronics Industries Co. Ltd. <00660.KS> under similar circumstances.

Like Micron Technologies, Hyundai also filed suit against Rambus in the United States, arguing its memory chips did not infringe Rambus patents.

"IP is our business and we will not hesitate to protect our IP when it is being used without a license," said Geoff Tate, chief executive officer of Rambus.

Trial for the Rambus case against Micron Technologies has been set in Mannheim, Germany for February 16th, 2001. Trial in Germany for Rambus' case against Hyundai is anticipated to start in February 2001.

Micron and Hyundai have resisted attempts to license Rambus technology, saying it was gained through industry meetings in the early 1990's and is unpatentable.

Rambus developed the technology to speed up computer chip processing speed, and has licensed it to a number of memory chip makers.

19:56 09-11-00