It's disappointing how there's so many rdram/p4 fanboys here who are eager to spend all their hard-earned cash just so they can brag about being able to run a couple memory bandwidth benchmarks faster...
Originally posted by: Ice9
It's disappointing how there's so many rdram/p4 fanboys here who are eager to spend all their hard-earned cash just so they can brag about being able to run a couple memory bandwidth benchmarks faster...
It's not about that for me. I can buy whatever technology I want, PC's just aren't a very expensive hobby.
For me, it's about which technology wins long term. If rambus were as crappy as people in here made it out to be, they wouldn't be making engineering milestones like they are in Cray X1's and Alpha EV7's. Since the goal is to get that performance to our desktops someday, I want Rambus to have something to do with it. They simply know more than the "engineers" at JEDEC.
Originally posted by: FishTankX
Originally posted by: busmaster11
It's disappointing how there's so many rdram/p4 fanboys here who are eager to spend all their hard-earned cash just so they can brag about being able to run a couple memory bandwidth benchmarks faster...
Hey, you! Let's see which wins. An i845D or an i850 when running at 2.8GHZ. I could do that, you know. The three choices at a time were an MSI i845D board, an i845 board, or an i850. I picked option number 3 and i've never regreted it for a moment. It's just that China inflates the prices of not such common stuff into the sky.
Aren't a very expensive hobby? Just how much do you make! I don't know if there is a more expnsive hobby! (Significant others don't count.)
Saying that you go with RDRAM now because you think it'll win in the long term makes no sense to me. I seriously doubt you will be using the same PC 800/1066 modules in upgrading to your next machine, so I don't see how it will matter for the future.
Anyway, a cursory skim doesn't show me as many rambus detractors as you say, or as I'd like to see, so I'm just here to even things up. I for one would like to see rambus die, and the continued evolution of DDR2/QDR... And if rambus does have a superior memory architecture, I'd like some solid proof they can get over the serious yeild and cost issues thats always plagued it... Until then, I'll stick to my DDR at 1/3 the cost and similiar performance, and you can brag about the 75% bench perfs all you want...
Originally posted by: Ice9
Aren't a very expensive hobby? Just how much do you make! I don't know if there is a more expnsive hobby! (Significant others don't count.)
Saying that you go with RDRAM now because you think it'll win in the long term makes no sense to me. I seriously doubt you will be using the same PC 800/1066 modules in upgrading to your next machine, so I don't see how it will matter for the future.
Anyway, a cursory skim doesn't show me as many rambus detractors as you say, or as I'd like to see, so I'm just here to even things up. I for one would like to see rambus die, and the continued evolution of DDR2/QDR... And if rambus does have a superior memory architecture, I'd like some solid proof they can get over the serious yeild and cost issues thats always plagued it... Until then, I'll stick to my DDR at 1/3 the cost and similiar performance, and you can brag about the 75% bench perfs all you want...
You have no reason to want Rambus to die.
If you think you do, they are wrong assumptions based on the media smear that's been going on for the past three years. And none of it has been true.
You can stick to DDR if you like, you're still supporting Rambus as a company with your 3% royalty payment that Rambus ultimately gets. In the meantime, you can sit in the bleachers with the rest of the DDR cheerleaders while Team DDR goes bankrupt![]()
Media smear? Does the media influence judicial decisions?
Originally posted by: busmaster11
by the way, I'm open to your perspective, if you can just show me a few linkies to prove it. Until then, I will want rambus to die, and stick by my accusation that proponents are either rich spoiled fanboys with no concept of real world performance or price vs performance, or they are newbies who've been told whats best without and decided to defend a sinking ship, or they are in fact, rambus employees.
Of course, I'm sure, in all seriousness, a small percentage of those who use it actually work with certain applications that take advantage of the memory scores, though I doubt many of them frequent this forum...
That you insist on being in the corner of a company which has been ruled against multiple times as far as SDRAM royalties ar concerned, doesn't bode well for your credibility. No, if you are trying to prove that the media dictates rulings in this case, you need to provide some evidence. Good luck.Originally posted by: Ice9
Media smear? Does the media influence judicial decisions?
ALL the time. So far, the only thing the courts have decided is:
Rambus is the holder of the original 1990 patent covering SDRAM and conversely DDR, and has the right to go after whoever they want.
LOL... Have you been reading or writing some of the rambust propaganda? It's not about who had the original patent. No one doubts that rambus had it prior to joining JEDEC, but they didn't disclose the information, left JEDEC, allowed new technologies to be standarized and then try to pull the rug out from under everyone else with royalties. If you are going to join JEDEC, you need to disclose your relevant patents. Sidestepping that is at wrose illegal, and at best, very dishonest. Methods such as those may be used routinely in today's business world, but it is still dishonest, and IMO, deserves to be prosecuted to the fullest extent possible.Rambus is not guilty of fraud because JEDEC rules governing patent disclosure were not clear, possibly intentionally.
I think what a lot of people don't understand is how patents work in the US with regards to "amending patent claims". A lot of people wrongly think that you can add technical information about a patent after the fact, and that's how Rambus "stole" patent information from JEDEC.
That you insist on being in the corner of a company which has been ruled against multiple times as far as SDRAM royalties ar concerned, doesn't bode well for your credibility. No, if you are trying to prove that the media dictates rulings in this case, you need to provide some evidence. Good luck.
Payne isn't the only judge to rule against rambust, as SteelyKen's link shows.
LOL... Have you been reading or writing some of the rambust propaganda? It's not about who had the original patent. No one doubts that rambus had it prior to joining JEDEC, but they didn't disclose the information, left JEDEC, allowed new technologies to be standarized and then try to pull the rug out from under everyone else with royalties.
If you are going to join JEDEC, you need to disclose your relevant patents. Sidestepping that is at wrose illegal, and at best, very dishonest. Methods such as those may be used routinely in today's business world, but it is still dishonest, and IMO, deserves to be prosecuted to the fullest extent possible.
So please, show me links, and show me exactly what "grevious errors" Judge Payne made.
Originally posted by: busmaster11
Originally posted by: FishTankX
Originally posted by: busmaster11
It's disappointing how there's so many rdram/p4 fanboys here who are eager to spend all their hard-earned cash just so they can brag about being able to run a couple memory bandwidth benchmarks faster...
Hey, you! Let's see which wins. An i845D or an i850 when running at 2.8GHZ. I could do that, you know. The three choices at a time were an MSI i845D board, an i845 board, or an i850. I picked option number 3 and i've never regreted it for a moment. It's just that China inflates the prices of not such common stuff into the sky.
You're just proving my point. Add up the cost of the 845x system vs the 850 system. Then prove to me you can tell the difference running most apps. Then tell me if its worth the extra 150-250 dollars.
Originally posted by: FishTankX
Originally posted by: busmaster11
Originally posted by: FishTankX
Originally posted by: busmaster11
It's disappointing how there's so many rdram/p4 fanboys here who are eager to spend all their hard-earned cash just so they can brag about being able to run a couple memory bandwidth benchmarks faster...
Hey, you! Let's see which wins. An i845D or an i850 when running at 2.8GHZ. I could do that, you know. The three choices at a time were an MSI i845D board, an i845 board, or an i850. I picked option number 3 and i've never regreted it for a moment. It's just that China inflates the prices of not such common stuff into the sky.
You're just proving my point. Add up the cost of the 845x system vs the 850 system. Then prove to me you can tell the difference running most apps. Then tell me if its worth the extra 150-250 dollars.
The i845 was a *special case* as it's memory technology was later implemented in dual channel memory controllers. If I wasn't desperate for RAM, i'd carry my PC800 over to an i850E rig. But my aspiration for 1GB of RAM has sort of made this unfeasable.