Submit a Story!
NVIDIA Responds To INTEL Court Filing
SANTA CLARA, CA. – FEBRUARY 18, 2009 – NVIDIA Corporation today responded to a Monday court filing (Court of Chancery in the State of Delaware) in which Intel alleged that the four-year-old chipset license agreement the companies signed does not extend to Intel’s future generation CPUs ...
Intel replies to solid-state drive 'slowness' critique
news.cnet.com — After a technology review site claimed Intel solid-state drives slow considerably after extended use, Intel said it... has not been able to duplicate the results. SSDs have been gaining in popularity because independent testing done to date has ... (more) Intel replies to solid-state drive 'slowness' critique
Intel to launch new CPUs for ultra-thin notebooks
digitimes.com — Intel plans to launch two new ultra low voltage (ULV) CPUs by the end of March this... year mainly targeting the company's consumer ultra low voltage (CULV) platform for ultra-thin notebook products, according to sources at notebook makers. (more) Intel to launch new CPUs for ultra-thin notebooks
Intel 32nm Westmere Processor Roadmap - Integrated Graphics CPU
Intel 32nm Westmere Processor Roadmap - Integrated Graphics CPU
pcstats.com — In 2006 Intel introduced its tick-tock schedule for microprocessor development. The "tick" part of the development cycle... refers to a shrink in fabrication process, taking an existing processor architecture and making it smaller, so it consumes less ... (more) Intel 32nm Westmere Processor Roadmap - Integrated ...
Comments
Blog Reactions

NVIDIA, Intel Trade Punches Over Chipset Licenses
Tech-Ex — ... the companies signed ''does not extend to Intel's future generation CPUs with 'integrated' memory controllers, such as Nehalem." NVIDIA, in a press release, begs to differ. ...

NVIDIA, Intel Trade Punches Over Chipset Licenses
GamingHeaven.net — ... the companies signed ''does not extend to Intel's future generation CPUs with 'integrated' memory controllers, such as Nehalem." NVIDIA, in a press release, begs to differ. ...

Intel takes NVIDIA to court over chipset licensing
Engadget — ... claiming that it is licensed." Of course, NVIDIA's official stance is that Intel is simply trying "stifle innovation to protect a decaying CPU business." We have all ideas that the whole truth (and nothing but the truth) lies somewhere in between, but we guess that's why we have people called "lawyers" heading to work each day. If you're daring enough to dig deeper, all the links you need are neatly positioned below. [Via HotHardware] Read - Intel's take Read - NVIDIA's official response Read - Further Intel comments Filed under: ...

NVIDIA Responds To Intel Court Filing
Overclockers Club news Feed — ... NVIDIA issued a statment today responding to an Intel court filing, which claimed that the four year old chipset license agreement between the companies does not cover future generation Intel CPUs with integrated memory controllers such as current Nehalem (Core i7) products. In the official statement, president and CEO of NVIDIA, Jen-Hsun Huang notes that the company is confident its license still applies and suggests that the court filing is "clearly an attempt to stifle innovation to protect a decaying CPU business." The filing comes after both ...

Shots Returned: Nvidia Responds to Intel's Chipset Lawsuit by Bashing CPUs
Maximum PC — ... "We are confident that our license, as negotiated, applies," said Jen-Hsun Huang, president and CEO of Nvidia. "At the heart of this issue is that the CPU has run its course and the soul of the PC is shifting quickly to the GPU. This is clearly an attempt to stifle innovation to protect a decaying CPU business." ...

Related: court of chancery in delaware intel nvidia
Intel Sues NVIDIA Over Chipset License, NVIDIA CEO ReactstechPowerUp!
In a surprising move by Intel, the silicon giant filed a lawsuit against NVIDIA corporation at the Court of Chancery in the State of Delaware, over the chipset licensing agreement between the two companies, that allows NVIDIA to make core-logic (chipset) for Intel microprocessors. Intel's ...