This article is more than 1 year old

Tech firm seeks $500m for Intel patent 'violation'

Pentium... er... II under threat

A little-known Canadian computer company has sued Intel for alleged intellectual property violation. All Computers claims the Pentium II contained circuitry for which it owns the right. Furthermore, it says, Intel does not have permission to use said circuitry.

All currently has two patents filed with the US Patent and Trademark Office, both entitled 'Apparatus and method for enhancing the performance of personal computers' and both centering on adjusting the clock speed of "an accelerator board for use in replacing the microprocessor of a slow speed system board with a microprocessor operating at a higher clock speed".

All claims that the Pentium II uses techniques outlined in the patents - 5,450,574 and 5,506,981 - to synchronise a processor's clock with the chipset's system clock.

Crucially, the technique allows CPU clocks to operate at fractional multiples of the system clock rather than whole-number multiples.

The Pentium II is of course defunct as a desktop processor, and All's patents were filed in 1993. So why the wait? We only just found out about it, the company claims. It's also evaluating the Pentium III for possible infringements.

Despite the delay, it wants $500m in damages from the chip giant, according to the lawsuit, filed yesterday with the US District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia.

The case marks the third time this year Intel has been accused of patent infringement. It has already been on the receiving end of lawsuits from Patriot Scientific, which maintains that Intel's SpeedStep technology clashes with its own patent for a dynamic clock speed adjustment system.

Meanwhile, MicroUnity Systems Engineering claims Intel's SSE 1, 2 and 3 multimedia-oriented instruction sets use technology it owns - again, without permission. ®

Related stories

Intel accuser alleges 150 others violate chip patent
Intel sued for Pentium patent infringement
Intel, Dell sued over SSE, HyperThreading
Broadcom, Intel agree to end fight, share toys
AMD, Intel to meet in court again
AMD gives up processor profits to Intergraph

More about

TIP US OFF

Send us news


Other stories you might like