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News of the day (August 24, 2007)


 G35 and DX 10 are made official for Intel
  Posted on 1187990843 by Nicolas

The product page of the G35 Express is already available on Intel’s site. Consistent with what was previously announced, management of DirectX 10, HDMI and HDCP is planned. Like its predecessor, the integrated graphic core (baptized, GMA X3500) will remain set at 667 MHz and the IGP which contains it will still be assisted by one of the ICH8 line.


Given the amount of time it took the Santa Clara giant to offer hardware support of Vertex Shader 3.0, we will probably have to wait a little to be able to fully take advantage of Shader Model 4.0 with an Intel solution - or at least to benefit from compatibility, because gaming with integrated solutions is often only possible on paper.



 The logo of the Opteron Barcelona revealed
  Posted on 1187988846 by Nicolas

The Inquirer has revealed the logo of the future Opteron Barcelona which will be launched September 10. Our colleagues at VR-Zone, which have reported this information, add that according to their sources, AMD partners have received B1 stepping Barcelonas with reviewed and improved AGESA (AMD Generic Encapsulated Software Architecture) code compared to that which was available with B0 stepping Barcelonas.




 Rambus under fire from the Commission
  Posted on 1187987425 by Nicolas

After Intel last month, it’s now its former partner Rambus’ turn to be under fire from Nellie Croes, European Commissioner for Competition, even if the two affairs aren’t related.

The European Commission confirms having sent a Statement of Objections (SO) on July 30 to the champion of RDRAM for abuse of dominant position involving « patent ambush » on DRAM, a standard adopted by the JEDEC. Even Brussels admits that this is the first time they’ve dealt with case of this nature. The procedure will add to a previous decision by the American Federal Trade Commission a year ago that this same firm engaged in illegal monopolization.

You may recall that Rambus claims royalties from all manufacturers of SDRAM memory and takes legal action against those who refuse to pay. However, according to the Commission’s press release, Rambus simply mislead the JEDEC, of which it has been a member since 1995, by not revealing the existence of certain patents. In addition, without this "patent ambush", the Californian firm would not have been able to demand such high royalties. Rambus now has nine weeks to respond to authorities in the Old World and after this they can request an oral hearing. If its preliminary conclusions are confirmed, the Commission plans on having the firm stop this practice and can impose a fine. The SO already mentions more reasonable royalties as an adequate solution.

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