Rambus has sued Nvidia, claiming that they infringe on 17 different patents.
Hey, any of you remember Rambus? That company that wanted to force RDRAM onto the market and basically sued everyone until it flamed out into oblivion in the early 2000s? Yeah, it’s still around, has a massively stupid slogan, and it’s suing NVIDIA for — what else? — patent infringment, claiming that NVIDIA products with SDRAM, DDR, DDR2, DDR3, GDDR, and GDDR3 memory controllers violate some 17 different patents. Rambus says it’s tried for six years to negotiate licensing terms with capital-N, but that it has “no other recourse than litigation” to get things sorted out. Valid or not, that’s not good news for NVIDIA, whose stock price is struggling due to market pricing pressure and the news that perhaps all its 8400M and 8600M chips are faulty and will require repair or replacement at the cost of at least $250M
I’ve been happy to see how much adversity Nvidia has seen lately. I really hope each of these incidents helps ATI get ahead.
Tags: nvidia, ram, rambus
Posted in Bad news, Graphics cards, Hardware, Patents | Comments (0)
The Open Graphics Project’s first hardware release, OGD1, is available for preorder.
The Open Graphics Project has started accepting preorders for their OGD1, a graphics card with a completely open source design. This initial release is billed as a high-end FPGA prototyping kit specifically designed to test computer graphics architectures. The card has two DVI connectors, S-Video, 256MB RAM, and a 64bit PCI-X connector. The core of the system is a Xilinx Spartan-3 XC3S4000 FPGA. A nonvolatile Lattice XP10 FPGA is used to bootstrap the Xilinx at power up. Here’s the layout of the specific components.
An open design like this could prove very beneficial to the free software community. The open hardware makes driver development much easier; binary drivers from traditional graphics manufacturers have been very hard to work with in the past. The OGD1 could also be used with CPU architectures that wouldn’t be unsupported by normal graphics cards. An FPGA based design means that CPU intensive processes like video decoding could be offloaded to the video card without needing a dedicated chip. There is still a lot of work to be done and at $1500 we’re pretty sure most of you won’t be buying the first generation. It’s still exciting to see traditional PC hardware getting reinvented and opened up. Check out the OGD1’s FAQ for more info.
$1,500? I’ll add this to my list of cool things to buy in the future when they are cheaper/I am not as poor, right there with the OpenMoko Neo.
Tags: ogd1, ogp, open graphics project
Posted in Good news, Graphics cards, Hardware | Comments (0)