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Comment Re:Actually... (Score 1) 141

Intel has a common design strategy of making two different teams work on the exact same project, without even knowing about the existence of the other.

That's just BS. I have worked at Intel, and while there were projects that wind up with significant overlap and do get canceled, it is NOT the case that the projects don't know about each other. I saw projects get canceled because there was only so many people to work on projects, and with projects A, B, C, and D all in various stages, project B needed to be canceled and people moved to C and D because there was no way to do all of them with the budget constraints - and if B got canceled, C would be coming soon enough afterward (within 6-9 months) and cover most of the target market that B was going after.

Bad for morale - but a necessary business decision.

It definitely wasn't the case though that they were on the exact same project, nor that they didn't know about the other team. (Working on the exact same project would be just plain wasteful - and management at Intel is not very tolerant of that kind of waste in my experience.)

(Speaking for myself and not for Intel obviously)

Image

Woman Claims Ubuntu Kept Her From Online Classes 1654

stonedcat writes "A Wisconsin woman has claimed that Dell computers and Ubuntu have kept her from going back to school via online classes. She says she has called Dell to request Windows instead however was talked out of it. Her current claim is that she was unaware that she couldn't install her Verizon online disk to access the Internet, nor could she use Microsoft Word to type up her papers."
AMD

AMD Plans 1,000-GPU Supercomputer For Games, Cloud 148

arcticstoat writes "AMD is planning to use over 1,000 Radeon HD 4870 GPUs to create a supercomputer capable of processing one petaflop, which the company says will make 'cloud' computing a reality. When it's built later this year, the Fusion Render Cloud will be available as an online powerhorse for a variety of people, from gamers to 3D animators. The company claims that it could 'deliver video games, PC applications and other graphically-intensive applications through the Internet "cloud" to virtually any type of mobile device with a web browser.' The idea is that the Fusion Render Cloud will do all the hard work, so all you need is a machine capable of playing back the results, saving battery life and the need for ever greater processing power. AMD also says that the supercomputer will 'enable remote real-time rendering of film and visual effects graphics on an unprecedented scale.' Meanwhile, game developers would be able to use the supercomputer to quickly develop games, and also 'serve up virtual world games with unlimited photo-realistic detail.' The supercomputer will be powered by OTOY software, which allows you to render 3D visuals in your browser via streaming, compressed online data."

Comment Re:Intel is a monopoly? (Score 1) 117

> They also offered special pricing, not for volume, but for "loyalty." They would give their customers a break if
> they were 100% intel customers and not "Buy 10,000 units and get 200 free, which would likely have been legal.

To be more accurate, AMD claims that Intel offered a break to customers if they were 100% Intel.
While Intel has stated that they did not do that, but only offered breaks based on absolute volume numbers.
(ie. Intel claims they would tell the OEM you get X price for Y volume. And if the OEM got Y volume that's the price they got, whether they sold just Y volume of Intel products or sold Y volume of Intel products and N volume of AMD (or cyrix or idt or via or ....) products.

Intel salespeople *KNOW* that any deal they make - for that matter, anything they say - can be used against Intel in an antitrust investigation of Intel. And if they were to make a deal such as you suggest, IMO they would be fired as soon as their manager found out. (Unless you believe that their manager, and all the way up the chain of management the people are incompetent... Given their success in the marketplace, I don't think they're incompetent)

Personally, I believe that Intel's management and salesforce are competent enough to stay just on the legal side of the antitrust laws.
I would bet that in 18 months, this investigation will have found basically nothing - no smoking gun like some AMD fans think is out there - and the investigation will be closed without a trial.

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