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War of Processors- Brief
INTEL VS AMD
Brief History Of Intel & AMD
1968- Intel is founded by Bob Noyce & Gordon Moore.
1969- AMD is
founded by Jerry Sanders along with a team of former Fairchild Semiconductor
employees.
Early
1980s- IBM chooses Intel's so-called x86 chip architecture and the DOS software
operating system built by Microsoft. To avoid overdependence on Intel as its
sole source of chips, IBM demands that Intel finds it a second supplier.
1982- Intel and
AMD sign a technology exchange agreement making AMD a second supplier. The deal
gives AMD access to Intel's so-called second-generation "286" chip
technology.
1984- Intel
seeks to go it alone with its third-generation "386" chips using
tactics that AMD asserts were part of a "secret plan" to create a PC
chip monopoly.
1987- AMD files
legal papers to settle the 386 chip dispute.
1991- AMD files
an antitrust complaint in Northern California claiming that Intel engaged in
unlawful acts designed to secure and maintain a monopoly.
1992- A court
rules against Intel and awards AMD $10 million plus a royalty-free license to
any Intel patents used in AMD's own 386-style processor.
1995- AMD
settles all outstanding legal disputes with Intel in a deal that gives AMD a
shared interest in the x86 chip design, which remains to this day the basic
architecture of chips used to make personal computers.
1999- Required
by the 1995 agreement to develop its own way of implementing x86 designs, AMD
creates its own version of the x86, the Athlon chip.
2000- AMD complains to the European Commission that
Intel is violating European anti-competition laws through "abusive"
marketing programs. AMD uses legal means to try to get access to documents
produced in another Intel antitrust case, this one filed by Intergraph. The
Intergraph case is eventually settled.
2003- AMD's big
technology breakthrough comes when it introduces a 64-bit version of its x86
chips designed to run on Windows, beating Intel, which for the first time has
to chase AMD to develop equivalent technology. AMD introduces its Opteron line
of chips for powerful computer server machines and its Athlon line for desktops
and mobile computers.
2004- Japan's
Fair Trade Commission (JFTC) raids Intel offices in Japan searching for
documents. Intel cooperates with the investigation but does not agree with the
outcome. JFTC officials find that Intel's Japan unit stifled competition by
offering rebates to five Japanese PC makers Fujitsu, Hitachi, NEC, Sony and
Toshiba which agreed not to buy or to limit their purchases of chips made by
AMD.
2005- AMD files
an antitrust suit against Intel in U.S. District Court in Delaware. The 48-page
complaint alleges in detail that Intel has unlawfully maintained its monopoly
in the x86 microprocessor market by coercing customers worldwide from dealing
with AMD.
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