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October 25,
2001
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By Tom Murphy
October 24, 2001
Electronic News |
No. 2 PC processor maker Advanced Micro Devices Inc. (AMD)
today said it has filed motions in the U.S. District Court of
Northern California in an attempt to compel Intel Corp. to
produce documents for European Commission (EC) investigators
looking into allegations that Intel is engaging in
anti-competitive behavior. Sunnyvale, Calif.-based AMD (nyse:
AMD) filed the motions early this month and said it is seeking
testimony and other evidence it believes will provide proof of
Santa Clara, Calif.-based Intel’s (nasdaq: INTC) alleged past
uncompetitive practices. The documents and testimony being
sought arise out of a 1997 sealed court decision involving
Intel and a company known as Intergraph Corp. of Huntsville,
Ala., according to an AMD spokesman. |
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By Jack Robertson
October 24, 2001
EBN |
Advanced Micro Devices Inc. and Intel Corp. are battling over
whether court documents from an U.S. antitrust case against
Intel can be used to bolster AMD's antitrust complaint against
Intel at the European Commission. AMD has filed suit in
federal district court in San Jose, Calif., seeking to
transfer expert witness testimony and other documents to the
EU that were gathered in the Intergraph Corp. antitrust and
patent infringement suit against Intel several years ago. An
Intel spokesman said the antitrust portion of the Intergraph
case was dismissed in 1999, although the patent infringement
portion continues. |
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By Reuters
October 24, 2001
C/Net |
Taiwan chip designer Via Technolgies reported a 64 percent
year-over-year slump in third-quarter pretax profit to $25
million (T$880 million), meeting market expectations. The
company said a series of lawsuits by Intel, which allege
patent infringements by Via, hurt the company's sales and
market share.
Analysts said the legal wrangle is scaring away Via
customers and prompted Via's decision earlier this month to
enter a new line of business a step down the PC production
chain and launch its own line of Via-branded motherboards. |
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By Ian Fried
October 22, 2001
C/Net |
Transmeta got some welcome news Monday as Fujitsu announced it
is bringing to the United States a notebook PC using the
latest low-power Crusoe processor from the struggling
chipmaker. Transmeta, which last week ousted its CEO and
reported it sold just $5 million worth of chips in the third
quarter, has found a niche with Japanese PC makers but has
struggled to crack the U.S. market. Sony, Casio and NEC have
introduced notebooks for sale here, but Compaq Computer and
IBM announced plans to stick with Intel's low-power chips. |
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Truths...from the rumor mill |
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By Mike Magee
October 24, 2001
The Inquirer |
A LEGAL CASE IS BREWING between AMD and Intel, the INQUIRER
can reveal. It's really not so much AMD attempting to sue
Intel as to force information to be revealed which it then
wants to turn over to European authorities investigating
alleged antitrust complaints. AMD has filed suit in the US
district court for the Northern District of California, with
the first action filed on the 1st of October last.
It wants to see papers in the case of Intergraph versus
Intel, a request that the latter is opposing. |
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By Andrew Orlowski
October 24, 2001
The Register |
AMD has filed a suit to release sealed evidence from Intel's
dispute with Intertrust to EU antitrust investigators. The
request, filed in the Northern California District Court in
San Jose, will be heard on November 12. The Integraph dispute
was settled two years ago with the judge ruling in Intel's
favour.
Intel has responded by saying that the items contain trade
secrets and that US law doesn't permit such trawling. |
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By Paul Hales
October 24, 2001
The Inquirer |
INTEL CLAIMS its Pentium 4 supply problems will soon be well
behind it and is looking forward to pumping out processors by
the cartload during the coming months. October though, will be
‘tight’ the corporation admits. It advises system builders to
hassle their Intel rep or their distributors for stocks of the
chip. ‘We got caught and did not plan for the amount of ramp
up the ‘breakaway’ caused,’ Channel business manager Alexander
Ward told system builders here in Poitiers. He claimed the
‘generous’ price drop Chipzilla made on the Pentium 4 during
the summer caused a surge in demand that caught the
corporation on the hop. |
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By Fuad Abazovic
October 23, 2001
The Inquirer |
WHILE I WAS STUCK SOMEWHERE in Austria waiting for a train, I
mused about Via's attitude to AMD's up-and-coming Hammer
microprocessor. Last week I was in Muenchen and some
neighboring EU countries, and attended a fair called
symbolically Systems - always a good place to pick up some
tips, info and gossip.
We've already revealed a fair amount about Via's support
for the K8 generation here at the INQUIRER some months ago. |
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By Mike Magee
October 23, 2001
The Inquirer |
THE MEMO THAT INTEL sent to its distributors and dealers last
week was interesting not only because of the demand-supply
conundrum, and because of the lack of its 900MHz Xeon, but
because of the extended plans it has for its notebook
build-to-order scheme. Last time we wrote about these plans,
only two companies - the largest of which was Asus - was
supplying the screen, chassis and other essential parts, for
machines which system integrators then reconfigure and
re-badge. |
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October 23,
2001
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By Michael Kanellos
October 18, 2001
C/Net |
Intel is winding down its consumer electronics division as the
company continues its return to its core chip business. The
Santa Clara, Calif.-based chipmaker Thursday confirmed that
its Connected Products Division, which specializes in digital
cameras, digital-audio players and toys, is in the process of
being phased out. The company will sell the existing inventory
of these products, which should last through the first part of
2002. But further manufacturing will cease. |
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By Faith Hung
October 19, 2001
EBN |
Via Technologies Inc. is looking for new pastures even as
Intel Corp. tries to raise a fence around the company's
Pentium 4 chipset business. In a bold move, Via said it will
enter the motherboard market to stimulate business for its
controversial -- and unlicensed --double-data-rate SDRAM-enabled
Pentium 4 chipset. If that wasn't enough to raise Intel's
blood pressure, the Taipei-based chipmaker said the same day
that it will field a 2GHz P4 clone based on Intel
technology-again, without a patent license. |
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By Ian Fried
October 22, 2001
C/Net |
Transmeta got some welcome news Monday as Fujitsu announced it
is bringing to the United States a notebook PC using the
latest low-power Crusoe processor from the struggling
chipmaker. Transmeta, which last week ousted its CEO and
reported it sold just $5 million worth of chips in the third
quarter, has found a niche with Japanese PC makers but has
struggled to crack the U.S. market. Sony, Casio and NEC have
introduced notebooks for sale here, but Compaq Computer and
IBM announced plans to stick with Intel's low-power chips. |
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By Michael Kanellos and Richard Shim
October 18, 2001
C/Net |
Although Transmeta's Crusoe chips have been showing up in
notebooks for about a year now, the company's financial
picture hasn't changed dramatically. The Santa Clara,
Calif.-based chip designer on Thursday reported third-quarter
revenue of $5 million with a net loss of $29.4 million, or 22
cents a share, including charges. Its net loss, excluding
special charges, came to $20.5 million, or 16 cents per share.
A consensus of analysts was expecting a loss of 15 cents per
share, according to First Call. |
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By Andrew MacLellan
October 22, 2001
EBN |
Rambus Inc. today took the wraps off of two new
memory-interface technologies aimed initially at boosting
bandwidth in consumer and communications devices. The
technologies, which together comprise Rambus' new Yellowstone
memory signaling architecture, are said to enable 3.2GHz data
transfer rates in memory subsystems in applications like game
consoles and communications line cards. |
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By Paul Kallender and Mike Clendenin
October 22, 2001
EE Times |
Rambus Inc. is due to unveil it next-generation Yellowstone
signaling technology at the Rambus Developer
Forum in San Jose, Calif., Monday (Oct. 22), implementing a
differential-signaling approach that hits 3.2-GHz frequencies
on the data bus. Rambus claims that Yellowstone will meet the
bandwidth demands of mulitgigahertz processors, but analysts
and OEMs are questioning whether Rambus will be able to meet
the cost structures of quad- and double-data-rate SDRAMs.
Yellowstone's octal-data-rate scheme boosts the memory's
400-MHz clock to 1.6 GHz. The phase-locked loop samples on
both the rising and falling edges, allowing Yellowstone to
pump out data at 3.2 GHz. |
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By Tom Murphy
October 22, 2001
Electronic News |
Analysts say that Santa Clara, Calif.-based Intel Corp.’s
support for Rambus Inc.’s RDRAM as main memory for its Pentium
4 microprocessors is dwindling, but you wouldn’t know that
from the overtures at today’s Rambus Developer Forum in Santa
Clara. During opening speeches at the two-day forum, Los
Altos, Calif.-based Rambus (nasdaq: RMBS) President Dave
Mooring said the company’s latest signaling technology scales
to supply bandwidth of 10GHz processors. Representatives with
Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. of Seoul, South Korea, still
believe RDRAM memory will comprise 25 percent of their memory
product mix. And an Intel (nasdaq: INTC) vice president said
the company’s roadmap includes Rambus chipsets for years to
come. |
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Truths...from the rumor mill |
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By Mike Magee
October 19, 2001
The Inquirer |
SHORTAGES OF 478 PIN Pentium 4s are being blamed on excess
demand, Intel has told its distributors, although it claims
that any problems will be short, rather than long term. That
follows a story we wrote earlier in the week after we heard
that availability of 478 pin chips was so constrained that
Intella might suffer in its fourth quarter.
Sure enough, it is October which is affected, as the
following memorandum from Intel to its disties makes evident. |
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By Mike Magee
October 19, 2001
The Inquirer |
SOURCES CLOSE TO VIA said that an employee who seemed to hint
that the firm had a Pentium 4 clone it might launch in 2004
hasn't been taken out and shot but is being advised to shop
around for a bullet with his name on it. The report, on a US
wire, said that Via was working on a Pentium 4 compatible
design. Via says there's no truth at all in the story.
But if you could put Via's HQ in Old Taipei in one of those
little glass globes with fake snow in it and shake it, then
the resulting blizzard would be writs from Intel for allegedly
infringing its patents on the Pentium 4. |
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By Mike Magee
October 19, 2001
The Inquirer |
INTEL HAS SAID that people buying notebook machines must
exercise their judgement when buying, if they want to take
advantage of Speedstep technology. That follows an article
we wrote yesterday, based on a Digitimes story, which
suggested that major notebook vendors including IBM and Acer,
were racing to shove machines out the door which use desktop
rather than mobile processors. |
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By Tony Smith
October 22, 2001
The Register |
Intel has admitted that its 845 chipset is in short supply,
for the immediate future, at least. Speaking to reporters in
Taipei today, Jason Chen, Intel's Asia-Pacific general manager
said: "Overall for the whole quarter we believe we will be
able to supply the market demand, but we believe we will see
some short-term tightness."
"If you're talking specifically about a hot item, like the
845, it will be very tight," he added. |