The licence will last for at least five years, but the two companies refused to disclose any other terms and conditions underpinning the deal. “Specific terms of the agreement are confidential,” said the firms’ joint announcement beneath a headline revealing AMD is paying $75m for the rights to the technology.
After waiting for months, we finally hear that AMD will support DDR2, and now they can technically support DDR3 if they wanted to. It’s great to see that they are ahead of things. Source: Channel Register.