Originally posted by: Idontcare
Originally posted by: Leyawiin
Originally posted by: lopri
We need a complete overhaul in Intellectual Property laws. Especially tech-related ones. I think most will agree that the time goes much faster in technology than anywhere else in our life.
Indeed. The x86 license held so tightly is stifling tech advancement.
What IP and patents are you guys referring to? The x86 ones expired a decade ago.
I worked for a company that still holds an x86 license, Texas Instruments. In 1995 we were producing our own 486 processor clocked to 80MHz. In 1996 we took it to 100MHz and they were selling for $100 (our internal slogan/milestone was "$1 per MHz or bust"). We never produced a pentium-class CPU not for lack of a license or the experience in the x86 market but because of the massive complexity and costs associated with continuing to design competitive x86 processors.
This myth that the barrier to entry into the x86 marketspace is caused by lawyers is really pervasive but lacks substance. The barrier to entry is the roughly $1B you need plus 4-6 years to design a modern-day x86 processor which will actually be competitive with whatever AMD and Intel spend their billions designing in the meantime.
TI, Cyrix, TransMeta, IDT...we all bowed out of the industry for one reason only - we either couldn't compete (lack of resources) or we had leadership that elected to not compete (spent the resources on other core strategies).
No IP issues holding Via back, and you don't see an awe-inspiring breadth of x86-based innovative products coming from them. For their budget the Isaiah chip is impressive, but it is as expected given their budget. Give them even less of a budget, but still the same x86 license and you'd have even less product depth. No boogy-man IP stuff going on there.