Samsung Seeking To Block Nvidia Chips From US Market 93
An anonymous reader writes: Bloomberg reports that Samsung has filed a complaint with the U.S. International Trade Commission asking them to block the import of Nvidia's graphics chips . This is part of Samsung's retaliation for a similar claim filed by Nvidia against Samsung and Qualcomm back in September. Both companies are wielding patents pertaining to the improved operation of graphics chips in cell phones and other mobile devices.
I mean this respectfully (Score:5, Insightful)
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Perhaps companies with idiots for lawyers shouldn't start attacking Samsung..
Apple attacked Samsung for using the same elements that Apple stole from others, Samsung attacked back with *real* patents to back themselves up.
nVidia attacks Samsung with questionable patents and Samsung attacks back with *real* patents.
Your "go fuck yourselves" should be directed @ Apple and nVidia you beligerent fuck.
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I'm no fanboi, but I keep finding myself buying Samsung devices for the same reasons as the AC. Although, so far, I've not tried rooting any of them.
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P.S. - Samsung, in no way, is a good company. They are bribery committing, price fixing, colluding, thieves - all convictions in a court of law.
Name one company which isn't.
All companies do it.
If found, pay fines, downplay it in media, and then proceed with the business as usual.
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Reguardless of how "patentable" things like round buttons and beveled edges should be you obviously don't understand how patents work. If Apple tried to sue the people they derived from for patent infringement they would loose and also run the risk of having their patent nullifed. If the people they copied from wanted to nullify the Apple patent or come to Samsungs aide in the case Apple put against them they could have. None of these things happened.
And while we're on the subject, Samsung has a long histor
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Frivolous? Their designs were a blatant ripoff of Apple's.
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Good thing there are more than two phone manufacturers, eh?
Why does this have to be Samsung OR Apple?
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is theft from a thief still theft?
Sharp stole LCD technology from a chemistry professor at Hull University and beat them to the patent office claiming it as their own - AFTER he published papers describing the technology. http://www2.hull.ac.uk/science... [hull.ac.uk]
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Tried to find any evidence on your claims that sharp stole the professors technology Your link only talks about the professor but nothing at all about sharp stealing it. Could not find anything other some of the basic LCD discoveries were licences out to various companies.
Thieves (Score:1)
Hey, let's be frank
In technology almost everyone is a thief
Not only in the corporate settings, even in the academia setting thievery thrives --- you do not even need to look far to read stories of professors stealing and patenting students' ideas from himself / herself
And I am speaking from experience ... I had (at least) one idea stolen by my professor(s) and I couldn't do shit about it --- basically I had the choice of litigation (which would linger for ages) against my professor(s) and the university (wh
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Except both were real patents. Apple's patents were Design Patents [wikipedia.org] which cover ornamental designs unique to the covered item. Samsung's patents were FRAND licensed Utility Patents.
And yes, if you want people to learn about computers, you gotta learn all about IP law because it's complex and tricky.
Samsung made a phone that did violate Apple's design patents - which
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>And yes, if you want people to learn about computers, you gotta learn all about IP law because it's complex and tricky.
So the girls should be becoming lawyers instead?
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Why don't we change the law so that when you have a patent you just get to put a little sticker on the box the devices comes in that says "I did this!" so your shareholders and your mums and dads can be really proud! Well done! And if you can win a law suit against someone else, they have to put a stick on their boxes which say "this box contains stuff some other company worked on" and people can decide whether they give a shit or not, and if they don't (clue: nobody cares), they can buy the product, but
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Once again patent law helps innovative small companies and the customer!
But hey (Score:2)
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I assume that maybe I would get a cheaper graphics card (Sweden.)
Lawyers are the only winners (Score:1)
Don't these 2 competitors realize by not sueing each other they both win?
In the end it doesn't matter who wins. the lawyers will take the money and both Nvidia and Samsung loose.
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Never mind that Samsung usually instigates the suing by stealing other people's shit...
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Once one has fired a Salvo the other is really obliged to do the same otherwise everyone else will see them as an easy mark. Blame the twat that decided to fire the first salvo and the idiotic patent laws. Samsung appear to be proceeding down the only avenue that the current ridiculous laws allow.
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The only winning move is not to play.
If you complain about no nvidia source take note (Score:3)
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that argument only works if Nvidia were the victim here.
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Yes, that is exactly my point - patent abuse (Score:2)
Konami v. Roxor (Score:2)
Deserved (Score:2)
Re:Deserved (Score:5, Insightful)
How, exactly, can Nvidia make games run poorly on other hardware? They don't write the games. Both AMD and Nvidia have extensive outreach programs to developers and make engineers available to game studios, and obviously those engineers will make suggestions on how to improve game performance on their hardware. But I doubt that game studio staff would be willing to cripple their games on either platform at the behest of Nvidia or AMD engineers.
Would you like to provide citations that they bribe sites? And how would that hurt game performance? How can using certain benchmarks (as you suggest) make games run slower on other hardware? And even if they did, are you saying that sites would accept Nvidia's suggestions and ignore AMD suggestions?
AMD fanboy much?
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How, exactly, can Nvidia make games run poorly on other hardware? They don't write the games. Both AMD and Nvidia have extensive outreach programs to developers and make engineers available to game studios
That is true, but nVidia's outreach engineers have a history of checking code that regresses performance on competitor hardware. See what this Value developer [blogspot.com] has to say about "Vendor A": Vendor A is also jokingly known as the "Graphics Mafia". Be very careful if a dev from Vendor A gets embedded into your team. These guys are serious business.
How can using certain benchmarks (as you suggest) make games run slower on other hardware?
Thats not what I'm suggesting. I am suggesting that nVidia has a history of being dishonest which thier performance benchmarks. The worst case by far is during th
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That is true, but nVidia's outreach engineers have a history of checking code that regresses performance on competitor hardware. See what this Value developer [blogspot.com] has to say about "Vendor A":
Vendor A is also jokingly known as the "Graphics Mafia". Be very careful if a dev from Vendor A gets embedded into your team. These guys are serious business.
So, you are suggesting that game studios let vendors check in code totally unreviewed? I worked at a company that had two engineers from Nvidia and 3 from AMD - none of them had the ability to check in code, although they did have access to our sources.
The Nvidia engineers were top notch, knew their products, knew how to get performance from their products, and would be unhappy if we didn't take notice of what they said. The AMD people were OK, but just not in the same league as the Nvidia people. Which was best for us? The Nvidia guys improved our product for both their customers and AMD customers. The AMD people would only look at AMD specific code and provided way less assistance. I'd go with the Nvidia guys any day - they were indeed serious, hard working engineers, one with a ph.d., the other with a masters.
And the best you can suggest for fiddling is a benchmark from 13 years ago? That several lifetimes in graphics technology - go look at any 2001 game. As I recall, both Nvidia and ATI (as it was then) tweaked benchmarks to favor their product around that time and were found out. However, modern graphics benchmarks make it difficult for any manufacturer to corrupt the results.
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While we're talking about Samsung, cheaters still find ways to cheat benchmarks. [bgr.com]. I wonder if Nvidia could sue over stealing their benchmark cheating methods too...
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Would you like to provide citations that they bribe sites?
Nvidias a dirty whore she slept around to trade favourable hardware reviews for sex. We should doxx her. I'll start:
NVIDIA CORPORATE HEADQUARTERS
2701 San Tomas Expressway
Santa Clara, CA 95050
Tel: 1+ (408) 486-2000
Fax: 1+ (408) 486-2200
info@nvidia.com
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How, exactly, can Nvidia make games run poorly on other hardware?
http://hardware-beta.slashdot.... [slashdot.org]
Is there any... (Score:2)
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NVIDIA holds a very large graphics patent pool. In a lot of ways they're the successor to SGI, and in the interim have picked up companies such as 3dfx, which has further enlarged their patent pool. Which makes it very, very hard to efficiently implement a GPU with
New meaning for competition? (Score:1)
Just in case we needed any more proof... (Score:2)
...that the patent system is fubar.
I know it is privacy invasive,how far can they go? (Score:2)
This makes me wonder how the public could contribute... Has anyone thought of, just for getting a
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Nvidias destruction. (Score:1)
Nothing would make me happier.
From an open source perspective Nvidia is far worse than Samsung with regards to hardware openness.
I mean, I have been very careful over the years to not buy phones, tablets, video cards that are associated with Nvidia in my private computing and professional computing experience.
I urge everyone here to do the same and put your dollars privately in those situations professional consulting can sway your customers opinion towards companies that have open hardware. Even companies
If this prevents me (Score:1)