NVIDIA CEO looks forward to court date with Intel
It has been a long fight, pretty much Intel is denying NVIDIA to make chipsets for Intel processors and this led to such a fight that the court now has to rule whether or not Intel has the right to make such a decision. However NVIDIA CEO Jen-Hsun Huang is looking forward to meet Intel in court, and added that he sees no reason to settle as his company has the bank account to go the distance in its legal dispute with the chip giant.
The CEO has taken a recent interview with Fortune magazine as an opportunity to eloquently lay out his side's case in the epic cross-licensing dispute between NVIDIA and Intel, and to let us all know that he sees "no reason" to settle with the Atom-making giant. Describing Intel's argumentation as "completely nonsense," NVIDIA's fearless leader tell us that he's eagerly anticipating the court clash scheduled for later this year.
NVIDIA completes acquisition of Icera - 06/14/2011 10:29 AM
NVIDIA announced today that it has completed its $367 million cash acquisition of Icera, a leading innovator of top-performing wireless modems for 3G and 4G cellular phones and tablets. Icera is now a...
Galaxy KFA2 preps NVIDIA card with six display outputs - 03/08/2011 12:01 PM
Galaxy (KFA2 in Europe) is developing a new NVIDIA graphics card with support for six displays. It's not known which GPU this card will use, the PCB looks the same as the one the company used for its ...
Thermaltake NVIDIA certified chassis - 07/05/2010 10:15 AM
Thermaltake announceda NVIDIA certified full-tower chassis for next-generation ultra-high performance graphics cards, the Thermaltake Element V NVIDIA Edition with support for the latest NVIDIA GeForc...
NVIDIA CUDA speeds up Nero Move - 04/24/2009 09:18 AM
NERO has released an update to its Nero Move it software that reduces video encoding time by up to five times by utilizing NVIDIA
Nvidia could put a halt to Larrabee - 03/30/2009 05:24 PM
The mud-fight inbetween NVIDIA and Intel repositions today. Nvidia claims that Intel uses Nvidia