No VIA may have had legal rights to the P3 bus due to the acquisition of S3 but VIA had no legal right to the P4 bus that they tried and failed to use without correct licensing. You can say we don’t have legal degrees to make a point, it won’t change the fact VIA tried to steal legitimate technologies from Intel and claim them as their own.Its not about "helping intel develop" anything, that doesnt give you any rights, its about the cross licencing S3 and intel had. VIA claimed this cross licence they aqcuired through S3 allowed them to produce pin compatible cpu's; and without the original contracts and a degree in law, I don't think anyone of us can make a usefull comment on it.
<A HREF="http://news.com.com/2100-1001_3-242800.html?tag=st_rn" target="_new">They loose</A> like the theives they are.
Oh great one a link please.You mean like when intel didnt worry when VIA took 50% of the chipset business with its crappy Apollo Pro 133 ?
Nope guess not better provide a link to these fantastic statistics you pulled.I guess you werent paying attention then.
No actually DEC was being retarded since they had a cross licensing agreement with Intel as well. They wanted money plain and simple, and they got it when Intel gutted their company and acquired all their patents.Thats how it ended; it started with DEC suing intel for patent infringement, and they proved their case in court. It was settled, sure, doesnt make intel any more innocent than whatever Crash claims VIA is guilty off. Intel just bought its way out.
Oh be sure to <A HREF="http://news.com.com/2100-1023-279719.html" target="_new">this</A> and <A HREF="http://www.intel.com/pressroom/archive/releases/CN102797.HTM" target="_new">this</A> out seems only a few months later Digital makes the call and caves, legal dispute over, and when it comes down to it who cares what Cyrix wanted VIA absorbed them shortly afterwards too.
Ya I suppose and <A HREF="http://news.com.com/2100-7341-5157749.html" target="_new">look</A> Intel wins again, shucks eh how their claims are tossed out. Actually come to think of it Intergraph did <A HREF="http://news.com.com/2100-1001_3-978245.html?tag=st_rn" target="_new">this</A> just to add to this shady company’s history.Regardless, once more, intel was sued for monopoly abuse, and illegally making it impossible for Intergraph to compete. though the case isnt over yet, they where already forced to pay $300M with possibly much more to come.
It is unknown if the cross licensing agreement covered SSE3 or not. But if the case is they are all covered with the agreement Ill go with the AMD can't deliver anything on time prognosis and leave it at that.Tot he best of my knowledge, it does cover extentions to the x86 ISA such as SSE1/2/3, and AMD64. The two year "cooling down" period may or may not be true (I doubt it, considering SSE3 is expected this year from AMD, maybe even this quarter), so If you have any proof otherwise, I'll be glad to read it.
Oh oh you going to tell me that AMD64 is a pure 64bit cpu that the whole insides have been redone and redone to 64bit, remade pointers, registers(all of them not the 16 they added), 64bit AGU's and FPU's?What a load of crap.
The core is a 32bit core with 64bit extensions added to it. The core is not 64bit the core has 64bit extensions that allow 64bit code to be run. The core is a 32bit core with 64bit extensions. Really how many times do I need to say that before it get threw your head? It’s a32bit chip pretending it’s a 64bit chip.
From reading what you have said about VIA and the lot I have to say I have a very similar opinion of you as Crashman does.
Xeon
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