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Microprocessor
Headline News

Top Stories for August 1, 2001 (details below)
Semiconductor Business News Intergraph files suit against Intel over 64-bit Itanium processor patents
C/Net Intergraph: Intel Itanium violates patent
EBN Intel move heightens war between Rambus and DDR
EE Times Intel content to let Rambus sink or swim, Barrett says
Semiconductor Business News Intel kills plan to use SVG's 193-nm scanners in production due to delays
Semiconductor Business News Mobile Pentium III revs to 1.13 GHz; three new chip sets add support
ZD Net UK Approval near on Intel PC-overhaul plan
Semiconductor Business News Intel and TI license ARM's upcoming 'v6' core for future processor products
Truths...from the rumor mill
The Register Italian Appeal Court rejects Rambus' request for Micron plant shutdown
The Inquirer Rambus outlines futures
The Inquirer AMD readies notebook speed bump

 

Microprocessor Headline News

Collected By Robert R. Collins

Week of July 29, 2001

Older News

August 1, 2001

Intergraph files suit against Intel over 64-bit Itanium processor patents

July 31, 2001
Semiconductor Business News

Intergraph Corp. late today announced that it has filed another suit against Intel Corp., this time charging that Intel's 64-bit Itanium processor technology infringes upon Intergraph's RISC-based MPU patents.

Intergraph's suit, filed in the U.S. District Court in the Eastern District of Texas, claims that Intel has infringed upon two patents that defines key aspects of parallel instruction computing (PIC). Developed by Intergraph's former Advanced Processor Division, the PIC technology is alleged to be an essential component in Intel's new Itanium chip.

Intergraph: Intel Itanium violates patent

July 31, 2001
C/Net

Workstation manufacturer Intergraph has filed a new patent lawsuit against Intel, claiming that the world's largest semiconductor company used patented Intergraph technology in its new line of Itanium high-end server processors.

Itanium, based on the IA-64 platform developed by Intel and Hewlett-Packard, was officially launched earlier this year after delays and testing. It uses the EPIC (explicitly parallel instruction computing) instruction set, which the lawsuit claims conflicts with 1993 Intergraph patents relating to instruction routing and parallelism.

Intel move heightens war between Rambus and DDR

By Jack Robertson

July 30, 2001
EBN

More blows rained down last week in the slugfest between Direct Rambus DRAM and double-data-rate SDRAM, with Intel Corp. clearly in the middle.

Intel caused much of the excitement by confirming that it is ending its Pentium 4 rebate plan and phasing out an incentive program under which it had been bundling Pentium 4 microprocessors and Rambus memory for white-box PC sales. An Intel spokesman said the memory IC discounts were no longer needed to promote the Pentium 4 family because Direct RDRAM prices have fallen sharply in the last several months.

Intel content to let Rambus sink or swim, Barrett says

By Mike Clendenin

July 30, 2001
EE Times

Intel Corp. chief executive officer Craig Barrett signaled on Monday (July 30) that he was quite content to let synchronous DRAMs and not Rambus DRAMs serve as the dominant memory in Pentium 4 systems.

"The consumer will decide" the fate of Rambus, Barrett said at the beginning of a two-day visit to Taiwan.

In the short term, it seems like motherboard makers have already decided which memory they prefer. Taiwan's top-tier motherboard makers, such as Asustek Computer Inc. and Gigabyte Technology Co., estimate that SDRAM-based boards will represent 70 percent to 80 percent of Pentium 4 system shipments by the end of the year.

Intel kills plan to use SVG's 193-nm scanners in production due to delays

By Mark LaPedus

July 31, 2001
Semiconductor Business News

Intel Corp. has scrapped its production plans to use 193-nm, argon-fluoride (ArF) lithography tools from Silicon Valley Group Inc. because of delays in tool shipments. The decision, confirmed by an Intel official in an interview with SBN, apparently kills a $100 million tool order.

The decision is also a major setback for ASM Lithography, which acquired SVG for $1.6 billion in stock two months ago to gain access to advanced scanner technologies and Intel's lithography business (see May 22 story). ASML officials in the Netherlands refused to comment on Intel's decision.

Mobile Pentium III revs to 1.13 GHz; three new chip sets add support

July 30, 2001
Semiconductor Business News

At a press event here today, Intel Corp. officially rolled out its awaited 0.13-micron Pentium III processor-M series with speeds up to 1.13-GHz at a price of $625 each in quantities of 1,000.

In addition, Intel introduced three new 830 chip sets designed to take advantage of the new mobile Pentium III processor-M performance and low power characteristics.

The Intel 830MP chip set supports external graphics and is available today, said the company. Later this year, Intel said it plans to ship the 830M chip set with high-performance integrated graphics. The 830MG chip set will also be available later this year with integrated graphics for lower cost systems, Intel said.

Approval near on Intel PC-overhaul plan

Stephen Shankland

July 31, 2001
ZD Net UK

A key industry group has all but approved an Intel technology to overhaul the innards of PCs, with full consent expected on Friday.

Currently, everything from modems to network cards plugs into computers using the widespread PCI (Peripheral Components Interconnect) standard. But increasing the speed of PCI will become prohibitively expensive, and engineers have been searching for an alternative that will let computers keep pace with ever-faster CPUs.

Intel and TI license ARM's upcoming 'v6' core for future processor products

July 30, 2001
Semiconductor Business News

ARM Ltd. here today announced an extension of its RISC processor-licensing pact with Intel Corp. to include a next-generation ARMv6 architecture and other core designs. The Cambridge company today also announced a licensing agreement for ARMv6 cores with Texas Instruments Inc., which will use the low-power consuming RISC processor core in chip sets for 2.5 and 3G cellular phone handsets.

Full technical details of the new ARMv6 architecture will be presented at Microprocessor Forum 2001 during October in San Jose. Terms of the licensing pacts with Intel and TI were not disclosed by ARM.

Truths...from the rumor mill

Italian Appeal Court rejects Rambus' request for Micron plant shutdown

By Tony Smith

July 26, 2001
The Register

The Italian Court of Appeal has thrown out Rambus' motion to have production of SDRAM suspended at Micron's memory plant in Avezano, Italy.

The two companies' next meeting in the Italian court is unlikely to take place before next year, by which time the two will have faced each other in the US court.

Rambus had asked the Italian court to grant it an injunction against Micron, preventing it from producing SDRAM until its allegations of patent infringement made against Micron have been judged. When the court rejected its request, Rambus took its case to the appeals court.

Rambus outlines futures

By Mike Magee

July 30, 2001
The Inquirer

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY (IP) firm Rambus bit the bullet last week and also tipped up at Bert McComas' Platform 2001 conference, indicating we don't know what, but it's pretty sure they wouldn't have been there this time last year.

Billy Garrett, manager of strategic marketing at the Los Altos firm, outlined the RIMM module roadmap for the next year - a year which still sees Rambus memory at the high performance end of the Pentium 4 desktop.

AMD readies notebook speed bump

By Mike Magee

July 31, 2001
The Inquirer

AS WE REPORTED at the end of June, we do not expect La Intella to hold the max speed on X86 notebooks for very much longer.

AMD sources told us at the end of June that the firm will release a 1.2GHz Athlon mobile "shortly after" the launch of the Tualatin .13 micron notebook chips Intel announced yesterday.

Further, the world+dog is still waiting for the introduction of the 1GHz Duron that's been out in the wild for some weeks now.

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