Rambus Allowed to Continue Patent Dispute Case 70
ZuperDee writes "According to an article at Forbes, Rambus has just won a major victory against Hynix semiconductor. They have also signed a $75 million licensing deal with AMD." The victory? Well, come March they get to go to trial against Hynix.
Mixed Feelings (Score:4, Insightful)
2 cents,
Queen B
Re:Mixed Feelings (Score:1)
As have I and undoubtably so have pretty much every hardware maker who caters to the budget minded.
Still, I think that the technology would have gotten much futher had Rambus licensed the patents.
Depends. If they were greedy, which I thought was the case as they wanted to push RDRAM, they could have driven completely different architecture to be accepted (which, d
Re:Mixed Feelings (Score:1)
Re:Mixed Feelings (Score:2)
In the experience i have had with rambus memory, it was definatly over priced and slowed compared to the competition. I think the AMD K6-2 on RDRAM
Re:Mixed Feelings (Score:2)
Maybe it was a self incriminating conspiracy theory to throw the bad press into a pitty party and contract compasion from wouldbe byers or loyalist. Nahh, i'm reading too much into what i remeber too little about.
Re: Memory speed isnt a bottleneck ... oh, sure.. (Score:1)
Rambus messed up. (Score:1)
The Rambus [wikipedia.org] Wikipedia topic is currently in a revert war over this very issue!
Re:Sod (Score:2)
Am I the Only One (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:Am I the Only One (Score:1)
Dunno, but I'm such and old git I think of [Too Much, The Magic Bus], which sounded like (zoomba the magic bus.)
Re:Am I the Only One (Score:1)
Another yawner (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:RAMBUS - Another company people love to hate. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:RAMBUS - Another company people love to hate. (Score:1)
If RD
Re:RAMBUS - Another company people love to hate. (Score:2)
You just damned a lot of architectural and engineering firms in the world. Most architects and engineers don't own their own construction companies that actually build the designs they come up with, yet sai
Of course they have a case... (Score:1)
Am I the only one to find the article less tha
Comment removed (Score:3, Funny)
Re:"Hynix"... (Score:1)
Re:"Hynix"... (Score:1)
Hyrax (Score:2)
AMD (Score:2, Interesting)
I'm more interested/worried in the whole AMD part, I do not want to see AMD mobo's running with Rambus's insanely expensive memory on it.
Re:AMD (Score:1)
Re:AMD (Score:2)
It'd be possible to get rid of them if you forced people to exert their right to the patent the second they found out someone was infringing it (much like trademarks). Or you could always just get rid of patents completely. That'd work too.
I also think that when someone tries to exert their patent by suing, they should be forced to prove they're making a real effort to create a commercially viable product. That way companies will stop p
Re:AMD (Score:2)
Having a working prototype of somethign being pattened should be a requirment to getting a patten. I don't know about being comercialy viable though. Licencing should reflect the ability of the patten holders claim of comercial viability though. It should be ilegal to set on a standards board, Push somethign as a standard then asert a patton claim on it wether it was previously pattened or not.
Re:AMD (Score:1)
RDRAM is horribly slow, and can't compete with DDR2 and DDR3 memory technologies not to mention dual channel DDR memory is much of an improvment over RDRAM
Rambus is now just an extortion racket, because they did submarine patents on the 'competing' technology to ensure they made money eith
Re:AMD (Score:3, Interesting)
IIRC, the big beef with Rambus cost isn't the royalty; as you point out, it's a rather small amount.
The big deal for price with RDRAM was that the stuff was more significantly expensive to manufacture; this meant that while RDRAM didn't cost much more (to a consumer) than DDR memory, it was far less profitable to the memory manufacturers.
How does this play into DDR and SDRAM? If Rambus's patents are held as valid, Rambus gets to set terms for how DD
Re:AMD (Score:1)
Re:AMD (Score:2)
The sad thing is that ram makers can use this as an excuse to increase the cost however they want. They can say that due to the settlement, this product cost X amount more and keep the prices there as long as they want. It is almost a license to colude with thier comp
Re:AMD (Score:1)
Re:AMD (Score:2)
I beleive the last time that the price of ram doubled (not trippled, okay so in the past it hasn't tripled, but it has doubled) was when taiwan was hit by a major earthquake, that destroyed an incredible amount of semiconducter manufacturing equipment.
normally the price fluctuates based on the commodity price of the materials used to make ram, and yeah i was considering oh, 6 years of back royalties plus legal fees, plus court awarded damages all coming due at once. maybe the p
Re:AMD (Score:1)
Re:AMD (Score:1)
Re:AMD (Score:2)
However, the inexpensive RAM is inexpensive because its design is stolen from Rambus (and priced below cost with the inention of damaging Rambus' position). When Rambus has their day in court, the guys that make your cheap RAM are going to have to pay. Hynix vs Rambus is the first in many manufacturer settlement trials. That case begins March 6. Seeing that Samsung is already guilty of price fixing and that the RAM manufac
Any more info on the deal with AMD? (Score:3, Interesting)
If AMD were to net this stuff for Athlon64s it would explain why they've been holding out on DDR2 for so long and would also prompt me to run out and buy Quad Opertons with XDR very quickly; memory bandwidth seems to be the greatest hurdle on the otherwise extremely broadly equipped Athlon64 line; I can see how it would make a lot of sense to pair it up with HyperTransport.
AMD + Rambus Multicore (Score:4, Interesting)
So does this mean that AMD is jumping on the many-multicore design bandwagon? They must have something up their sleeve...
Re:AMD + Rambus Multicore (Score:1)
I have RDRAM (Score:5, Funny)
i mean, $200+ for 512MB? can you beat that?!
Re:I have RDRAM (Score:1)
Re:I have RDRAM (Score:1)
I have 256 MB of PC800 RDRAM. I'm planning to switch to dual channel DDR 400, from what I've read RDRAM is much slower than DDR (dual channel), let alone DDR2. Can you show some benchmarks supporting your position?
Rambus?! (Score:1)
Whew, glad they pulled through... (Score:2)
and to think of they had NOT had the major victory then their future in the industry just might be possibly been compromised! Just think, a world without Rambus.... *shudder* I don't want to think about how it would be without them.
I admit I'm surprised (Score:2)
Re:I admit I'm surprised (Score:2)
Re:I admit I'm surprised (Score:1)
Re:I admit I'm surprised (Score:2)
Hm, maybe, but I'll insult you anytime you like ;)
Re:I admit I'm surprised (Score:2)