Rambus - Gerichtsreporter Broemme mit Neuigkeiten
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Die Entscheidung wird von Rambus begrüßt, da in einem in Italien anhängigen Verfahren zwei Sachverständige einen Patentrechstverstoß durch Micron bejahen.
Friday July 20, 4:52 am Eastern Time
Press Release
German Court to Appoint Technical Expert for
Rambus versus Infineon Patent Infringement Case
LOS ALTOS, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--July 20, 2001--The District Court in Mannheim, Germany today decided to
appoint an independent technical expert to evaluate the infringement of Rambus' patent by Infineon Technologies' SDRAM and
DDR SDRAM memory products.
The independent technical expert is to be appointed by September 15, 2001. After the expert delivers an opinion, the
Mannheim Court will determine whether the Infineon SDRAM and DDR SDRAM memory products infringe Rambus' first
European patent EP 525 068, as Rambus has claimed in its suit against Infineon.
``Rambus is pleased with the ruling by the District Court in Mannheim,'' said Geoff Tate, CEO of Rambus. ``The independent
technical experts appointed by the court in Monza, Italy found Micron's SDRAM infringed Rambus' first European patent.''
Two technical experts were appointed last year by the Monza Court in Italy to evaluate the infringement of Rambus' patent by
Micron's SDRAM products. Their technical examinations lasted over five months encompassing all pertinent prior art
information and potential infringement of the Rambus patent by the Micron SDRAM products. The court-appointed experts
produced an exhaustive report, confirmed the validity of the Rambus patent in suit and determined that Micron's SDRAM
products infringe the Rambus patent. A copy of this report is located on the Rambus web site at http://www.rambus.com under
``litigation update''.
Gruß Dr. Broemme
Der Rest wird erst verkauft, wenn RMBS wieder bei 50$ steht!
Good Trades!
Dr. Broemme
Press Release
SOURCE: Rambus
Judge Clears Rambus on JEDEC DDR Allegation
Rambus to Appeal Remaining Rulings
LOS ALTOS, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Aug. 10, 2001--Yesterday, the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of
Virginia set aside the jury verdict from the trial in May and cleared Rambus Inc. (Nasdaq:RMBS - news) of the allegations
relating to DDR SDRAM standard setting.
``We are pleased that the record has been set straight on DDR SDRAM,'' said Geoff Tate, CEO of Rambus. ``However,
Rambus still intends to appeal the patent infringement case and the jury verdict on Rambus' behavior at JEDEC with regards to
SDRAM. We aim to conclusively prove that Infineon is violating Rambus' patent rights and that Rambus must be justly
compensated by Infineon for the use of our patents.''
The Court rejected Infineon's motion to enjoin Rambus from pursing further patent infringement litigation regarding Infineon's
DDR SDRAM memory products while it granted a parallel request to prohibit Rambus from pursuing such litigation in the U.S.
regarding Infineon's JEDEC compliant SDRAM memory products. In addition, the Court ordered Rambus to pay for a portion
of Infineon's attorney fees.
Rambus will immediately file an appeal to the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit in Washington, DC.
Gruß Dr. Broemme
By Mike Tarsala, CBS.MarketWatch.com
Last Update: 3:23 PM ET Aug. 27, 2001
MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. (CBS.MW) - Rambus shares surged 20 percent
Monday after Intel introduced its new high-end Pentium IV
microprocessors using Rambus memory.
The new Intel microprocessors use Rambus-designed memory, and run at
speeds of 1.9 gigahertz and 2 gigahertz. Intel says computers based on the new
chip can create and share digital media up to 81 percent faster than computers
based on 1-gigahertz Pentium III chips.
Chips that use Rambus' (RMBS: news, chart, profile) dynamic random access
memory, or RDRAM technology, can send data at more than twice the speed of
less expensive SDRAM-based chips.
Rambus also announced Monday that it plans to demonstrate and present
technical papers for the company's planned RaSer and SerDes communications
products at an Intel developers' forum. The new products aim to speed up
communications links.
Rambus is developing RaSer and SerDes using developments similar to those
used in its flagship memory technology. The products are to be used in chips for
networking routers and switches, potentially opening a new market for the
company.
In addition, the chip-technology provider plans to demonstrate products on
Tuesday that will help increase memory chip frequencies to 1,200-megahertz,
which it expects will meet the future needs of personal computer makers.
Rambus shares gained $1.13 to $6.80 on trading volume of 4.3 million.
Gruß Dr. Broemme