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To: Bilow who wrote (74989)6/27/2001 2:11:27 AM
From: Pat Hughes  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 93625
 
For Bilow from Micron

simplotfoods.com



To: Bilow who wrote (74989)6/27/2001 10:30:55 AM
From: richard surckla  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 93625
 
Bilow... More on Winbond...

Winbond To Provide Rambus RDRAM Memory Devices; Leading Taiwan DRAM

RELATED SYMBOLS: (RMBS)

HSIN-CHU, TAIWAN and LOS ALTOS, CALIFORNIA, JUN 27, 2001 (CCN Newswire via
COMTEX) -- Winbond Electronics Corporation and Rambus Inc. today announced
Winbond is ramping RDRAM(R) production volume and is currently sampling 128Mb
and 256Mb RDRAMs. Winbond will support the growing demand from OEMs for RDRAMs
and RIMM(TM) modules for use in performance desktop PCs and workstations.

Winbond Electronics Corporation is the largest branded IC company in Taiwan.
Winbond's product portfolio covers PC and peripheral-related ICs, consumer
electronics ICs, multimedia ICs, SRAMs, non-volatile memory and DRAMs. In 2000,
Winbond for the first time entered the list of top ten worldwide DRAM
manufacturers by increasing its branded product shipment as percentage of the
company's total production according to International Data Corp. (IDC).

"Rambus RDRAMs will be a strategic part of our product offerings this year,"
said CC Chang, President of Winbond Electronics Corp. "Winbond is committed to
meeting the PC industry's need for higher memory bandwidth, and we intend to be
an important RDRAM supplier to PC companies."

"Winbond will be a key supplier of RDRAMs for OEMs and various channels as they
move to volume production later this year," said Dave Mooring, President of
Rambus Inc. (Nasdaq:RMBS). "As a leading DRAM supplier in Taiwan, Winbond will
add local production capacity which is important to support the ramp of
Pentium4/RDRAM-based systems."

Leading PC OEMs have introduced platforms based on Intel's Pentium(R) 4
processor and RDRAM memory for higher system performance. In the Pentium 4 based
platforms, the 3.2 gigabyte per second RDRAM subsystem is optimized to meet the
bandwidth requirements of the processor's internal system bus for balanced
system performance. Users running applications such as media-intensive content
creation, streaming video, MP3 audio, as well as data mining and visualization
benefit from the increased system performance, particularly in a multitasking
environment. RDRAM memory also allows platforms to scale in performance as the
Pentium(R) 4 processor moves to even higher frequencies.

About Winbond

Winbond Electronics Corporation was founded in 1987 and is based in Hsinchu
Science-Based Park, Taiwan. It has since become the largest branded IC company
in Taiwan, offering a broad range of PC and peripheral-related ICs, consumer
electronics ICs, multimedia ICs, and memory ICs. Winbond is a market leader in
the telephone dialer, PC I/O controller, memory, speech synthesizer and MPEG
decoder markets. With four wafer fabs currently in operation, the Company
utilizes process technologies ranging from 1.0um down to 0.175um. Winbond has
more than 4,500 employees worldwide, with design centers located in Hsinchu,
Taiwan; Shanghai, China; San Jose, California; Austin, Texas; and Herzliya,
Israel.

About Rambus Inc.

Rambus Inc. (Nasdaq:RMBS) designs, develops and licenses high bandwidth
chip-connection technology and provides the comprehensive engineering support
necessary for a complete system solution. Rambus' technology and intellectual
property are licensed to leading semiconductor suppliers including DRAM,
controller and microprocessor manufacturers, ASIC developers, and foundries for
use in computer, consumer and networking systems such as personal computers,
workstations, servers, game consoles, set top boxes, digital HDTVs, high-speed
switches and routers.

More information on Rambus Inc. and its high bandwidth technologies is available
at rambus.com.

Winbond is registered trademark of Winbond Electronics Corporation. Rambus and
RDRAM are registered trademarks of Rambus Inc. RIMM is a trademark of Rambus
Inc.

CONTACT: Winbond Electronics Corporation
Hander Chang
Spokesman
(886) 3 5792755
cychang@Winbond.com
or
Winbond Electronics Corporation
Mike Liu
Public Relations
(886) 3 5792516
ckliu@winbond.com.tw
or
Rambus
Kristine Wiseman
Public Relations



To: Bilow who wrote (74989)6/27/2001 12:29:52 PM
From: Jdaasoc  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 93625
 
carl:
Quick questions
What is negative hold time and should I be worried about it.

images.micron.com

Micron is coming out with 256 Mbit capacity DRAM devices. What is earlier 2Q01 or 3Q01. Ditto 2H01 vs 4Q01.

images.micron.com

john



To: Bilow who wrote (74989)6/27/2001 11:47:46 PM
From: tinkershaw  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 93625
 
On a company that had a fraud verdict go against them in a US court.

Heck that makes Dell a criminal company I would think and many others throughout history. But hey, those Rambus folks are criminals, right? A "deadly menace" to the industry.

As I said, Bilow, there is nothing credible about your perspective. Other than in your universe Rambus is the sworn enemy much like the "vast right wing conspiracy" was to Hillary and Bill. The only truth is the truth that besmearches Rambus.

But I am not going to respond to anymore of Bilow's personal jab points. My only purpose of doing so was to just point out, as if it really needed pointing out, that Bilow's information was not exactly without an agenda and not exactly, shall we say, spin free.

Tinker
P.S. regarding request for legal input on the situation by Sun Tzu. I wrote a column in regard on the Fred Hager site, I shall try to find it and post some excerpts. Overall, there are many weaknesses on both the fraud and the Markman count. None are so blatantly erroneous that a reasonable appellate court could not decide either way; however, IMHO, there are enough errors in both counts that Rambus does truly have a good chance on appeal, this is not just wishful thinking. I do feel some material errors of law were made. To add to this the Markman decision is to be reviewed de novo, which means as first impression without any deference to the trial judge. From reading Judge Payne's Markman opinion, it does become somewhat obvious that Payne is not experienced with dealing with cases of this sort. Certainly Payne's decision is well enough crafted and supported that it could well be upheld on appeal, however, it also seems to really be utilizing the wrong legal standard in the manner that he came to reaching his decision. I know Bilow will come back with what, "he dotted all the i's and crossed all the t's," well yes, except he seemed to do it from a standard that did not comport with the applicable standard. But that is for the appellate court to decide.

As for the fraud verdict, this is really a tough one. There does appear to be many really good areas for getting this overturned on appeal, but again, none of them completely certain. The appellate court will give the jury's factual findings, as long as the fact finding is credible, deference, this makes the appeal on the fraud count more difficult from the start. But still not a shot in the dark by any menas. But the fraud verdict may have the effect of issue preclusion if upheld on appeal. Meaning, if the facts in the Micron case regarding fraud are identical, that the Micron judge may be required to adopt the fraud count in his court as well. The same could hold true for some of the Markman decisions, not all, but at least arguably some. Given the differences in technologies and patents in suit, issue preclusion in the Markman issues are far from certain. I would really need to spend a few hours analyzing these issues to give a better answer. And I just don't feel the need to do so.

In fact, the probably reason Micron tried to intervene in the Infineon trial at such a late date is to try to put the issue of issue preclusion into the Micron case. A party normally cannot just sit back and wait and not intervene, and then claim issue preclusion, when that party could have intervened and protected their legal rights in the first case. By trying to intervene, Micron is trying to grab this element for their issue preclusion argument.

I think Micron made somewhat of a mockery in their motion to intervene, since it came so late.

So in conclusion, as it sounds like I'd need to teach a law class to communicate the issues: If both Markman and Fraud are upheld, Micron may attempt to apply issue preclusion in the Micron trial and have the judge rule as a matter of law that the Infineon decision, where applicable to Micron, must be upheld in the Micron court as well. Whether or not Micron will be successful at this will require much more research by me, as well as get over several complicating issues like the way Micron made a mockery of attempting to intervene at such a late date. It seemed, at least to me, to be a transparent attempt of stepping in almost at a risk-free time, making the gesture of intervening, when Micron was fully aware that they were far too late to be joined as a party.

I am not very familiar with European law so I won't comment. As for winning in Europe and not in U.S. I would think that any DDR produced in Europe, no matter where sold, would be subject to royalties, and that any DDR sold in Europe, no matter where manufactured would be subject to royalties. Leaving royalty free any DDR made in the U.S. and sold in the U.S.

But, this case has barely begun. What came out of the Infineon trial is not likely to be anything close to what eventually happens in the case. And most likely a settlement will be reached at some point.

Sheeesh, I forget how much law I know. But as a general perspective, without doing any extensive legal research specifically for this case, that is where things stand I think.

Tinker