Rambus Allowed to Continue Patent Dispute Case
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.
I have been the beneficiary of several of their infringed upon patents, enjoying the benefits of cheap memory in almost every device I own. Still, I think that the technology would have gotten much futher had Rambus licensed the patents.
2 cents,
Queen B
HDGary secures my bank
*Actually I made that up, but it's probably depressingly close to true.
A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
Who thinks of the Laker's power forward Kurt Rambis of their 80's team whenever a Rambus article appears? Granted they're spelled differently, but my brain doesn't seem to care...
If brevity is the soul of wit, then how does one explain Twitter?
Rambus lost big a long time ago. I always assumed if they sued enough companies they may win one. :\
Patrick Havens (Mr. 573333 to you.) Graphic Artist / Coder / Father / Journeler
I don't understand why there are compaines out there that like to go around making people hate them with their suspect business practices.
RAMBUS has to be one of them, SCO would be another and there is always Microsoft.
Oh well, lets hope they get their arse kicked and they decide to be a good corporate citizen.
I have Rambus RAM in an old P4 HP. It was real fast when most computers were still shipping with 128MB PC100/133 and I had 256MB of Rambus. But now the refresh rate is just horrible.
It's just me.
...I don't know if that sounds more like the name of a posix-compliant operating system, a sandwich cookie, or a part of a lady's nether-regions...
With spending like this, exactly what are "conservatives" conserving?
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.
Pete/Petri "damn, my chainsaw is clogged with 1's and 0's again." --clyde
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.
My 3D Texturing Skinning work (under construction)
So does this mean that AMD is jumping on the many-multicore design bandwagon? They must have something up their sleeve...
and let me tell you, it is the best value in ram anywhere!
i mean, $200+ for 512MB? can you beat that?!
Am I the only one to find the article less than interesting, BTW? Basically, "Patent dispute case allowed to continue" is redundant. Patent litigation per se will continue until the patent system is fixed, unless we all run out of money first.
OK, so it's another another lawsuit. The big question is, how will this affect memory chip prices? Should we start stockpiling RAM?
One side's opinion is that they joined a memory chip ocnsortium for setting memory standards in which all the members were supposed to disclose their patents on elements that would go into proposed standards, but Rambus didn't disclose their patents.
The Rambus Wikipedia topic is currently in a revert war over this very issue!
Are they still around? I haven't heard that name in two or three years.
Rambus has just won a major victory
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.
And they said zombies weren't real!
While we're on the subject
www.clarke.ca
And this time I had mod points. I gave the story time and waited to see if there was anybody to mod up or anybody to mod as overrated. Instead, this story is actual news, and virtually nobody posts.
Slashdot is the Fox News of Patents.
[DRAM + sync --> SDRAM; If you had original 1992 dram in your Pentium or Athlon, you'd think DRAM speed IS a limitation.] Memory speed has been much increased since the Pentium II by the incorporation of RMBS's patented concepts into generic DRAM. Unfortunately, the major Memory Makers appropriated RMBS's IP without paying royalties. THAT is/was the problem. RAMMAX