CPU/Mobo Interesting AMD-Rambus news

Rahul

Skilled
BOSTON (Reuters) - Rambus Inc. (Nasdaq:RMBS - news) on Tuesday said that chipmaker Advanced Micro Devices Inc. (NYSE:AMD - news) has agreed to pay $75 million over five years to license Rambus technology for boosting the speed at which computer chips communicate with each other.

The agreement with AMD doesn't cover Rambus patents related to a widely used type of computer memory.

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LOS ALTOS, California, United States - 1/3/2006 Rambus Inc. (Nasdaq:RMBS), one of the world’s premier technology licensing companies today announced the signing of a five-year patent license agreement with Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. (NYSE:AMD) which grants AMD a license to Rambus patents. The license includes Rambus patents used in the design of DDR2, DDR3, FB-DIMM, PCI Express* and XDR™ controllers as well as other current and future high-speed memory and logic controller interfaces.

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Advanced Micro Devices and Rambus Tuesday said the former would pay the latter $75 million as a part of a five-year patent license agreement between the microprocessor maker and technology developer. The agreement includes licensing of memory and interface technologies.

The license includes Rambus’ patents used in the design of DDR2, DDR3, FB-DIMM, PCI Express and XDR controllers as well as other current and future high-speed memory and logic controller interfaces, according to a statement by Rambus. Sunnyvale, California-based central processing unit maker will pay Rambus $75 million for the five-year technology licensing.

While the PCI Express is an industrial standard developed by a group headed by the world’s largest chipmaker Intel Corp., Rambus has developed certain ways of PCI Express silicon implementation. The Rambus PCI Express serial link interface products include PHY (physical) cells and digital controllers optimized for flexible and rapid implementation of the PCI Express standard.

It is unclear for what AMD may need to license PCI Express technologies, but possible reasons can be creation of its own chipsets as well as integration of PCI Express links into microprocessors for certain applications, such as embedded systems.

“The license of our patent portfolio with AMD’s demonstrated innovation in the microprocessor market is highly compelling,†said Harold Hughes, chief executive officer at Rambus.

AMD did not comment.

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Quite interesting. RAMBUS has designed the XDR memory subsystem and chip-interconnect for the upcoming PS3. AMD's positive stance on this looks very encouraging for the console.
 
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