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Monday, March 23, 2009

Hynix Agrees to Pay Rambus $397 Mln Settlement

The decade-old patent infringement battle between Rambus and, well, pretty much everybody has taken another step towards closure, with the U.S. District Court for the North District of California entering a final judgment against Hynix for a total of $397 million. Of that figure, $134 million will cover patent infringement between December 31, 2005, while another $215 million will cover infringement from January 1, 2006, through the end of January 2009. Rambus was also awarded another $48 million in interest."We are pleased with the Court's decision and are gratified by the tremendous time and energy the Court has dedicated to this matter," said Rambus senior VP and general counsel Thomas Lavelle, in a statement. "Though this case has been long and arduous, we remain steadfast in our commitment to seek fair compensation for the use of our patented innovations."
Hynix, for its part, has complied with the orders of the court, but says it disagrees with the judgement and may pursue an appeal to the Federal Circuit, and notes that another court found Rambus destroyed evidence, and the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office recently issues rulings finding Rambus's patents invalid. Moving forward, Hynix will have to pay Rambus royalties on net sales of particular memory products from January 31, 2009, through Paril 18, 2010: the amounts are 1 percent for SDR SDRAM products and 4.25 percent for DDR SDRAM products, with the latter rate applying to DDR, DDR2, DDR3, GDDR, GDDR2, GDDR3 SDRAM, and DDR SGRAM products. Moving forward, Hynix will have to pay Rambus royalties on net sales of particular memory products from January 31, 2009, through Paril 18, 2010: the amounts are 1 percent for SDR SDRAM products and 4.25 percent for DDR SDRAM products, with the latter rate applying to DDR, DDR2, DDR3, GDDR, GDDR2, GDDR3 SDRAM, and DDR SGRAM products.

ATI Catalyst 9.3 Unified Drive Brings To Life New Windows 7

AMD released Windows 7 driver support as part of the latest ATI Catalyst 9.3 unified graphics driver. ATI Catalyst 9.3 represents the industry’s first unified driver installation package to incorporate Windows 7 support, including Windows Display Driver Model (WDDM) 1.1 compliance, bringing with it a host of benefits for developers currently testing and updating applications using the widely available Windows 7 beta release. In addition, the inclusion of Windows 7 drivers sends a clear message to the millions of AMD graphics customers worldwide – ATI Catalyst 9.3, and every planned future release of ATI Catalyst, is ready for the final release of Windows 7.
In addition to the rock-solid stability of ATI Radeon graphics drivers for Windows 7, the combination of Windows 7 and ATI Radeon graphics permits developers to fully utilize the DirectX 10.1 API used by Microsoft to design the Windows 7 Aero desktop. Graphics with hardware support for the DirectX 10.1 API, currently available in ATI Radeon HD 3000 and ATI Radeon HD 4000 series products, can deliver the full Windows 7 Aero desktop PC experience, including support of new features such as Aero Peek and Aero Shake, both designed to improve navigation of the Windows 7 desktop.

Apple's 17-inch iMac for Students

Apple's March edition of its education newsletter was a piece of attraction for the tech world besides educational institutions because Apple included information about the new, refreshed iMac line-up and hints about the 17-inch iMac in it.The Apple Store for Education will show Purchase for your Institution options with two categories: K-12 and Higher Education. Further, one can create a quote by adding details about the school, or one has to log in as an authorized purchaser.
To the clear clouds of confusion surrounding the issue, Apple hasn't introduced a new 17-inch iMac machine. It's the same old polycarbonate 17-inch iMac. This 17-inch polycarbonate iMac is intended for K-12 or higher educational institutions. Only an authorized purchase agent or educational institution can look into deals for the iMacs for K-12 and higher educational institutions. The 17-inch polycarbonate iMac starts at $899 (Rs. 46,000 approx.), packing a 1.83 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo processor, a 1GB DDR2 RAM, a 24x combo drive, and Intel GMA 950 graphics. Not an ideal choice for educational institutions looking forward to purchase upgrade-friendly machines. Apple had stopped public retailing of this 17-inch iMac since 2007, and it's surprising why these polycarbonate iMacs are being offered without any refreshed hardware. The 13-inch white Macbook is refreshed with a Nvidia 9400M graphics chip and is being offered to the general public.