Friday, March 27th 2009

NVIDIA Files Countersuit Against Intel

NVIDIA Corporation today announced that it has filed a countersuit in the Court of Chancery in the State of Delaware against Intel Corporation for breach of contract. The action also seeks to terminate Intel's license to NVIDIA's valuable patent portfolio.
NVIDIA's countersuit was brought in response to a filing by Intel last month in the Delaware court, alleging that the four-year-old chipset license agreement does not extend to Intel's future generation CPUs with "integrated" memory controllers, such as its Nehalem processor.
"NVIDIA did not initiate this legal dispute," said Jen-Hsun Huang, president and CEO of NVIDIA. "But we must defend ourselves and the rights we negotiated for when we provided Intel access to our valuable patents. Intel's actions are intended to block us from making use of the very license rights that they agreed to provide."

NVIDIA entered into the disputed agreement in 2004 to bring platform innovations to Intel CPU- based systems. In return, Intel took a license to NVIDIA's rich portfolio of 3D, GPU, and other computing patents. NVIDIA had been attempting for more than a year to resolve the disagreement with Intel in a fair and reasonable manner.

To read Intel's initial filing, go to:
www.nvidia.com/object/io_1238021549708.html

To read NVIDIA's response and counterclaim, go to:
www.nvidia.com/object/io_1238021621363.html
Source: NVIDIA
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28 Comments on NVIDIA Files Countersuit Against Intel

#26
ThorAxe
FordGT90ConceptThey do. Intel 80286 (1982) was the first processor to feature a "chipset" (North and South Bridge). That didn't change until 2003 with the AMD Athlon64 FX-51. It didn't change for Intel until 2008 with the Intel Core i7 965. The "chipset" designed for the 80286 reigned supreme for over two decades. I think that could/should be considered "traditional."
Does this also mean that it must only work with 16-bit cpus? :laugh:
Posted on Reply
#27
FordGT90Concept
"I go fast!1!11!1!"
The 80286 through Core i7 can still handle 16-bit code. That's more of a CPU architecture trait than a chipset trait.
Posted on Reply
#28
newconroer
chaotic_ukso intel are going after nvidia as well as amd , what is it nowdays with all the claims and counter claims nowdays ?
This shouldn't come as a surprise...Larrabee and all...
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