Intergraph Injunction Against Intel Suspended For Now 130
Kilbasar writes "News.com is reporting that the Itanic has hit another iceberg, with a District Court granting an injunction stopping Intel from making the chip. However, the injunction was immediately suspended to allow for another round of appeals, and I don't really see anything coming of this other than Intel paying Intergraph anywhere from $100M to $250M to use their patents."
The way I see it... (Score:2, Interesting)
the price (Score:3, Informative)
I can picture it now.... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I can picture it now.... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:I can picture it now.... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:I can picture it now.... (Score:1)
Re:I can picture it now.... (Score:1, Offtopic)
I bought some AMD at 8.50$ this summer and felt pretty bad when it fell to 3.50$... I should have waited until then to buy. It's now back at 6.14$.
If they Intel loose this appeal AMD stocks will probably go higher, hopefully over what I paid for it.
This is good news
Re:I can picture it now.... (Score:3, Interesting)
A good example would be nokia-ericson parallels. Even though nokia is consistently making a profit and even beating the market estimates its stock gets pounded by bad news coming from a mismanaged swedish mobile phone manufacturer. So when someones misfortune should be someone elses fortune it just ends up being a misery for everyone (at least stockholders).
Re:I can picture it now.... (Score:1, Troll)
First, the dollar sign goes BEFORE the amount. (Like this: $8.50)
Second, it's LOSE! LOSE LOSE LOSE!
Loose = the dog is running away!
Lose = I did not win this trial.
Posts like this makes me wish there was a [-1 Retard] moderation, although, I'm sure Offtopic will fit nicely, since I'm fairly certain that no one gives a damn about your investments.
Re:I can picture it now.... (Score:1, Offtopic)
Loose = the dog is running away!
Lose = I did not win this trial."
I wonder if we should start some kind of crisis intervention group for people like us, so that we don't pop a vessel in our head when somebody misspells "lose" as "loose"
Re:I can picture it now.... (Score:2)
Before correcting other people's English, you should learn it.
Too bad (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Too bad (Score:2)
I think that Joe has been using quite a few Athlons.
Re:Too bad (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Too bad (Score:5, Funny)
Intel is not the only chip manufacturer out there. AMD with its clawhammer is looking to be a better option anyway. Its just too bad teh general public doesnt know this.
Yeah, if you're AMD you have to envy Intel's marketing campaign. Nothing says "massive computer power" like a bunch of bald idiots covered in blue bodypaint dancing around like jackasses.
GMD
Re:Too bad (Score:4, Insightful)
Travis
Re:Too bad (Score:1, Interesting)
Now if AMD could get off their ass and build a product that the OEMs would buy (ie, doesn't overheat, have the heatsink fall off in transit, have a high DOA rate, or perform poorly in SMP configurations), they wouldn't have to worry about idiotic P4 commercials.
Re:Too bad (Score:1)
Now while I am a newbie, I am a computer science major and I know *something*, so I figure that until I can install Linux without major pain (X set up takes weeks, MBR gets overwritten for some reason, etc.) Linux will not be a widespread desktop alternative...
AMD would be a less widespread alternative if Windows would not run on it.
Re:Too bad (Score:2)
Re:Too bad (Score:1)
Redhat + ATI Rage 128 (still don't know why I got it to work, was really by accident, in my opinion)
Debian + GeForce4 MX440.
Redhat was a while ago, though (2 years?)
Re:Too bad (Score:1)
Re:Too bad (Score:2)
Christ no. Why do we have the people bringing up this same point every time?
x86 is old. It's nasty. It's full of kludges to work around its architectural flaws. And what does AMD want to do? Extend the lifespan another ten to fifteen years! For the sake of all that is sane in computing, don't buy this chip!
Mac users made the switch from their old m68k's to PowerPC, why can't PC users make the switch from x86 to something decent when the time comes? Maybe the Itanic isn't the solution to the ISA woes, but x86-64 definately isn't. In the long run, AMD is doing a disservice to the computing world.
*muttermutter* And of course, all this since a few zealots hate Intel and all it produces for some stupid reason.
My that's rich! (Score:3, Funny)
What a wit!
'Course I'm only half right.
Re:My that's rich! (Score:1, Funny)
Re:My that's rich! (Score:2)
I think that's borrowing a page from Scott McNealy's playbook...
Re:My that's rich! (Score:2, Informative)
Re:My that's rich! (Score:3, Informative)
But I'm not saying that McNealy invented the expression - just that he's made it his own. Just like Barry Switzer didn't invent the wishbone offense; he just borrowed it and used to run over Nebraska and Texas for fifteen years or so.
--Jim
Just curious... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Just curious... (Score:1)
Re:Just curious... (Score:2)
-B
Re:Just curious... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Just curious... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Just curious... (Score:1)
They used to until they chose to buy Intel clips. They were thinking of making an EPIC chip but decided the compiler would be impossible.
Re:Just curious... (Score:1)
One pitfall, however: In some countries, you have to issue a mandatory license when you do not use the patented technology yourself for a reasonable amount of time (several years).
And the judges will not have any trouble finding a reasonable fee for that license.
As I understand this... (Score:5, Interesting)
As I understand it further... (Score:1)
If they're already out $150 million, according to that they would have only been out $150 if they *didn't* appeal at all, and just sought to license the patent from Intergraph. It seems rather silly to bring about more litigation to me.
What does this mean? (Score:4, Interesting)
Not Suspended.. (Score:4, Funny)
Here's dictionary.com's [dictionary.com]take on this new word, and Merriam-Webster's take on it is to blurt out "The word you've entered isn't in the dictionary. Click on a spelling suggestion below or try again using the Dictionary search box to the right."
As a side note, statistics say most new words are borne out of careless spelling mistakes.
Re:Not Suspended.. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Not Suspended.. (Score:2, Troll)
Re:Not Suspended.. (Score:1)
This is so we don't have to wait a day or three to read the posts.
Re:Not Suspended.. (Score:2)
Yep, and they have the first half implemented so far.
-
Re:Not Suspended.. (Score:2)
Not to be confused with "careles speling mistaks". Which means something else entirely.
Re:Not Suspended.. (Score:2)
In effect, I might suggest that suspened is couterpart's counterpart in lexicon creation.
Consider this:- Merriam Webster's entry [m-w.com] for "couterpart" is the same as that of "suspened"! As an avid user of the English language, I deplore this blatant lack of creativity; why should two new words mean the same?
I will never understand the court decisions (Score:5, Insightful)
Ok. So I get sued by someone for stealing his non-flushable-toilet idea (which is great concept), and he wins the first round in the court and I am ordered to pay him $42 million dollars. So, I make an appeal, which I win. They decide I did not do anything wrong after all. By this appeal I won't get anything back, but I won't have to pay anything more either. By suing me, the inventor got $42 million for nothing?
Re:I will never understand the court decisions (Score:1)
Re:I will never understand the court decisions (Score:1)
Under an agreement reached between Intel and Intergraph in April...
I don't think that's how it usually works...only if you make an agreement like this outside of the courts.
Re:I will never understand the court decisions (Score:1)
http://www.intergraph.com/press02/se
Re:I will never understand the court decisions (Score:2)
Yeah, these settlements are another part that I don't understand. If the companies believe they can make wiser decisions outside the court, why do they go inside the court. Isn't the result just perverted cases like this?
Re:I will never understand the court decisions (Score:5, Interesting)
Well, in order to get to the part of the process where they sit down and hammer out an agreement, they have to go through the legal system equivalent of a game of chicken.
Intergraph says "I'm better than you" (you used our IP without paying)
Intel says back "No you're not" (no we didn't).
Intergraph retorts "Oh yeah? I'll prove it--I challenge you to a game of chicken" (We'll see you in court)
Intel: "Fine!" (Fine!)
Then, as the cars speed towards each other head on (as the court case progresses), Intel thinks that Intergraph isn't going to swerve out of the way first (has evidence to back up its claim), so they jerk the steering wheel to the side and chicken out (agree to some sort of non-judicial arbitration).
Driving head-on at one another is an important part of the legal system. It is the most costly of all the various means of proving whose wiener is bigger, but could very well end up with both parties wrecking their cars or dying. But since it's the only means of redress Intergraph can force Intel to participate in, it was invoked as its last resort. Basically, Intel wasn't going to give Intergraph a dime voluntarily unless their other option was limited to giving it to them involuntarily.
Personally, I think the CEO's of each company should be forced to play an actual game of chicken to decide the case. It might be a bit arbitrary, but the entertainment value would make up for that.
Re:I will never understand the court decisions (Score:2)
They decide, okay we get use patent X,Y, and Z for $200M and you agree never to sue us for using them again. Intel gets to make processors using the patents, and Integraph gets money for nothin. This way nobody gets dicked by a long drawn out trial to try and explain advanced technical concepts to lay-persons. With a court case, you are guaranteed nothing.
Re:I will never understand the court decisions (Score:2, Informative)
Agreed... as in mutually came to a deal.... the court didn't order this part. Intel assumedly got something in return, though I admit I havn't kept up with the case (or even read the fucking article) so I don't know what.
Re:I will never understand the court decisions (Score:3, Informative)
Yeah, I guess that's how it went. But imagine the potential extra costs Intel must have feared when they decided to sacrifice the $150 million to reach the agreement. It would be nice to know which extra ace Intergraph had in their pocket during the discussions.
Re:I will never understand the court decisions (Score:2)
Re:I will never understand the court decisions (Score:1)
<P>
No. $42 million for the invention.
Re:I will never understand the court decisions (Score:1)
The thing that still puzzles me is that it was settled out of court in an agreement that if Intel lost the case, they would pay $150 million to Intergraph to license their patent. Yet, if the appeal shows that Intel did nothing wrong, I don't see why they can't just renege on the contract, as they didn't really lose the case then. This whole deal to me seems like legal gambling.
November coming fire... Samhain grim (Score:4, Insightful)
I've hardly ever heard of Integraph outside of a few lousy graphics cards, or their workstation Clipper chips -- and just how much of Integraph's corporate income comes from suing Intel?
Emergency dispatch (Score:3, Informative)
They got a contract from a previous state government here in Victoria (Australia) to do this for the ambulance service. It was a massive screwup, with buggy software, inexperienced staff, people at the top of the ambulance department mysteriously going to work for Intergraph after signing the contract with them, and opposition from the ambulance drivers' union, and eventually the contract had to be cancelled amidst political scandal.
Re:November coming fire... Samhain grim (Score:3, Interesting)
Then you obviously do jack shit with engineering workstations. Intergraph's graphics cards and workstations were for years among the best in the business. Overpriced, perhaps, but technologically sophisticated. when i worked in huntsville doing graphics, we used to get intergraph workstations on loan from the corporate office to use in our demos and at tradeshows. it was like christmas time, four or five times ayear. anyway, the whole reason this is an issue is because intergraph was doing this stuff years before intel decided to.
Aside from graphics and engineering workstations, intergraph sells a lot of gis and civil engineering solutions worldwide.
Re:November coming fire... Samhain grim (Score:3, Informative)
Intergraph's past has been like a smaller version of SGI, only with less flashy products (scientific workstations more so than graphics, although both did both). They started out as a proprietary systems company that did massive value adds to existing technology.
However, in the mid-90's they became more and more dependent on Microsoft and Intel to do alot of their work. As such they became less specialized but still higher cost.
In the mid-late-90's they had a number of blunders (including the now infamous Windows NT-commanded navy ship that went dead in the water due to software issues). They also fumbled on the emerging consumer PC 3D graphics card market
They still had high-end hardware
I won't bad mouth them too much, I got a free dual PPro server and external 6 drive RAID case from one of the Intergraph admins who worked with us on the NNTP server. I loved that Beast.
Anyway
Re:November coming fire... Samhain grim (Score:1)
Anyway, you can follow the case at theregister, they have stories of this case since 1998. In the first one you can read: "Intergraph obtained an injunction against Intel in April, following its November suit alleging that Intel had indulged in anticompetitive behaviour, patent infringement and violations of antitrust law".
I used to follow this case, and thereg seemed to give more credit to intergraph than to intel.
Who knows who is right, though; I'm in a mess with this david vs goliath / bigcorp vs sponger suiters thing.
Re:November coming fire... Samhain grim (Score:5, Informative)
Intergraph has been around since about 1970. I worked at Intergraph from 1990-1996. They used to make their own CAD workstations; hardware & software. This was back when a high end CAD workstation would cost 50-75 thousand dollars. The hardware would often include it's own furniture with dual or triple monitors built in and a D-size digitizer.
They were never a consumer product company. They sold workstations to certain engineering and design niches. Their specialty is civil engineering and geographic infomation software. Have you ever looked at a topographic map? At one point all USCGS topographic maps were made on Intergraph workstations. They sell a lot of 911 systems, a spin-off of their other GIS stuff.
They sold some electronic design software, mostly a spin-off of the products they used in house to design their Clipper chip (not the encryption Clipper chip. Boy do I remember the furor when the govt started talking about that!).
They wrote their own publishing software based on a gencoding system similar to SGML. This was used for all of their in-house documentation. TV Guide used an enhanced version of this system for a few years.
I worked in their mechanical division. They were doing object oriented programming in the early 1980's, long before it became popular. Unfortunately, being one of the first, they made a lot of mistakes in the way they chose to implement it, which led to an enormous number of bugs and workarounds in the later products that were built on the same core technology. I could model anything in I/EMS. However, for anything beyond simple models, I'd spend about 40% of my time working around bugs. I/VDS (shipbuilding software) was built on top of I/EMS. They wone a $600 million contract with the Navy back in 1990-1991.
Shortly before the Pentium came out they were realizing that PC's were approaching serious CAD workstation levels. People were not going to pay $35k for a Clipper workstation when they could get a PC maybe half the speed, but one-tenth the cost. They made a couple of deals with Intel and sold their clipper chip unit to Sun. They were one of the first companies to ship a computer with a Pentium inside, and they were the first to ship a multi-processor Pentium machine. Back when a good $2k Pentium PC would ship with 16 or 32MB of RAM. They were shipping a $10k PC with 256MB of RAM, four processors, and a graphics card optimized for major vector graphics work. Note: vector graphics, not animation. Gamers were very disappointed when this $10k machine would do worse on Doom than their $2k machine at home. Still it had major horsepower. Bill Gates used an Intergraph workstation when he introduced Windows NT. When he said "This is the coolest machine in the world!", INGR stock rose about 30% the next day. Then one day as a couple of Intergraph's engineers were working with some Intel engineers to optimize Intergraph's next CAD workstation to work with the Pentium II the Intergraph engineer said "Hey, that looks an awful lot like one of our old Clipper designs." and the patent lawsuits and corporate warfare started.
Unfortunately, though they pioneered a lot of things, they kept getting passed by the new kid on the block. PTC's Pro/Engineer had all of the features of I/EMS with twice the speed, half the cost, and relatively no bugs. (That was back in 1995. Now Pro/E is in almost the same position relative to SolidWorks.) And in hardware, you can't keep selling $10k CAD workstations when 1GB of RAM is about $100. They've spunoff or shut down about 3/4 of their old operations and are concentrating on what they're good at. GIS and suing Intel.
Re:November coming fire... Samhain grim (Score:1)
Remember Their Voodoo Rush card that sold in retail outlets? Intense 3D, I believe
Sadly, Voodoo Rush sucked... and none of the 3 mfg's ever fixed the damn drivers (Hercules, INGR, ???)
Re:November coming fire... Samhain grim (Score:2)
Re:November coming fire... Samhain grim (Score:1)
Re:November coming fire... Samhain grim (Score:1)
Re:November coming fire... Samhain grim (Score:2)
Re:November coming fire... Samhain grim (Score:1)
Re:November coming fire... Samhain grim (Score:2)
Re:Suspened??? (Score:5, Funny)
"Oh, is that like a falsisity?"
"Yes, your honor."
"Oh, now I understandify."
Re:Suspened??? (Score:3, Funny)
Erm, are you slashturbating [slashdot.org]?
I simply can't justify buying Intel anymore (Score:4, Informative)
We can only hope that AMD won't sell out in the same way.
Re:I simply can't justify buying Intel anymore (Score:3, Informative)
Re:I simply can't justify buying Intel anymore (Score:3, Insightful)
If the industry is determined enough sooner or later you won't have a choice, you'll have Palladium or you won't have a computer.
Still, there's the Soaring Dragon to consider, can't see the chinese buying the whole TCPA thing in the short term...
Re:I simply can't justify buying Intel anymore (Score:1, Informative)
Re:I simply can't justify buying Intel anymore (Score:1)
Re:I simply can't justify buying Intel anymore (Score:2)
"Athlon XP runs Windows XP better..."
Re: (Score:1)
Ignore the "General Public" (Score:3, Informative)
Closing Prices (Score:4, Informative)
AMD 6.14 -0.18 -2.85% 5.239 Mil
INGR 18.40 -0.64 -3.36% 1.151 Mil
So who is suffering ?
What will Integraph do with the money? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:What will Integraph do with the money? (Score:3, Funny)
Patent pong. (Score:1)
They should thumb their noses (Score:2)
Since the hammer is already better, backward campatible, and unhampered by patent problems (AMD paid their bill without whining?) they should just can the project, recall anything that they have already sold, and give a big "Screw you" to all parties involved.
Of course from a PR standpoint, I would cry and moan about how hard it is to be me. But I wouldn't be paying out an extra 100-250M to have a loser on my hands.
then, since AMD would be sitting on their laurels, compete with your own tech that you can't sell. Take some time to really do up the next generation good, and come back with a big punch.
Would not having the next gen be better or worse than having the poorer of the next gen?
(For the sake of discussion assume AMD was winning, as I think they were, but they are both vaporish)
Re:They should thumb their noses (Score:2)
If you knew the amount of time/effort/money that Intel has and is putting into Itanium, you would realize that this suggestion is preposterous.
As far as paying for a loser, Intel has already dumped out $350M to Integraph, these lawsuits are about ADDITIONAL payments. Intel isn't stupid enough to bury themselves in a project they think will never make enough money to be worth it.
Hammer and Itanium are not in the same market. They may compete a little bit, but neither Intel, nor AMD plans to have them competing with each other. Remember Xeon? its still around despite the lack of press. Itanium is supposed to be very high-end computation based and Hammer is a smaller server/desktop product that will compete with Xeon and Pentium brand processors.
Re:They should thumb their noses (Score:2)
C//
Re:They should thumb their noses (Score:1)
-Peter
Re:They should thumb their noses (Score:1)
Re:They should thumb their noses (Score:2)
Riiiiiiight.... Move along, nothing to see here.
Re:They should thumb their noses (Score:1)
IBM and Sun don't just make chips, they make money by selling IT solutions. I think that in this decade you will see the commoditisation of the industry leads to players like IBM and Sun being pushed out of the chip market and the specialists will take over. And I don't see why AMD will be any more successful at competing with Intel in the enterprise market than they are in the PC market. I don't buy the concept of backwards compatibility with regards to the hammer, it just seems like a half arsed effort to push their way into the enterprise market. The big money is not in X86 anyway.
My thoughts (Score:4, Interesting)
BUT the means are justified. Intel's an immoral Juggernaut. Intergraph was their golden child for a couple years; Intel used INGR boxes to show off their new stuff...
Then INGR (perhaps wrongly) started to go after mobo mfg,'s over a patent they had on L2 cache (which is a stronger patent then the one above). Mobo mfg's shout 'help, Intel' and Intel proceeded to destroy INGR's Hardware division. At that time they were the only reasonable CPU to use for high end graphics (except SUN's stuff but there's no way SUN would sell to a compeditor).
So INGR stopps getting any engineering info and this puts them a year behind in their mobo design (a year is deadly).
This suit's been going on forever. Earlier this year INGR had the ability to stop Itanic production but caved for a piddly amount of money (the INGR CEO, Jim Taylor, basically got intimidated by The Intel CEO, Craig Barrett, into giving them patent rights for nothing). I would've loved to have INGR's say in that room. I would've shut them down out of despite the damn money.
Predatory corporations like Intel need to be taught a lesson occasionally.
Hammer, Hammer, Hammer!
This would be more fun... (Score:1, Funny)
hmm (Score:2)
Last Post! (Score:1)
They had worked for months gathering one each of every computer that was
built. Finally the big day was at hand. All the computers were linked
together. They asked the question, "Is there a God?". Lights started
blinking, flashing and blinking some more. Suddenly, there was a loud
crash, and a bolt of lightning came down from the sky, struck the
computers, and welded all the connections permanently together. "There
is now", came the reply.
- this post brought to you by the Automated Last Post Generator...
Re:stop buying intel products (Score:1)
Re:stop buying intel products (Score:1)
just on topic :)