VIA getting out of the Intel and AMD chipset business
primesuspect
Beepin n' BoopinDetroit, MI Icrontian
A sad day for the older computer enthusiasts in the crowd. I'm sure we all remember the heady days of VIA's chipset mastery, especially in the Abit KT7A-RAID days. Those were the days of Icrontic's meteoric rise to fame, and no small part of that was attributed to riding on the coattails of VIA's chipsets. Our guides and member expertise with their platform were responsible for the birth of a whole generation of overclocking enthusiasts.
Alas, VIA have announced in an interview with CustomPC, that they are going to be focusing on platform development, their Nano CPU, and chipsets for the Nano.
Richard Brown, VIA's Vice President of corporate marketing, said:
Alas, VIA have announced in an interview with CustomPC, that they are going to be focusing on platform development, their Nano CPU, and chipsets for the Nano.
Richard Brown, VIA's Vice President of corporate marketing, said:
One of the main reasons we originally moved into the x86 processor business was because we believed that ultimately the third party chipset market would disappear, and we would need to have the capability to provide a complete platform. That has indeed come to pass.
Of course, as Fatcat says, "Well, if they had made something good after the KT133, this wouldn't be happening." Not known for stellar performance or even stability anymore, VIA's exit from the chipset business doesn't come as a huge shock. 0
Comments
I've been using your mom...... well, never mind.
Yes, I'm one of the "old" guys who started with KT100 and worked my way up. I remember in 2003 when I built two computers - one was an Intel with an Intel 975C chipset and the other was an AMD with an NForce 2 system. After the relative ease of building both of them, I realized on the spot that I would never, ever miss VIA chipsets.
The only positive that I can offer for VIA chipsets is that they enabled AMD to flourish. AMD CPUs + cheap VIA-based motherboards made many of us happy. ALI and SIS perhaps could have filled the gap had VIA not been there?
//EDIT: Mine were very stable and massive overclockers.
VIA was critical for AMD's success, not because of any inherent innovation or quality, but because VIA was essentially the only mass production option available for AMD.
The day Nvidia released the NForce 2 chipset family, VIA became irrelevant except for the ultra low end market, to which it clung, and that only because of low cost.
VIA became irrelevant because it made poor choices with the KT400 and on, not because all of its products were bad. VooDoo made the same mistake, and paid for it with their company.
VIA never made a real move for the Intel platform because Intel has always made and will continue to make solid, fantastic chipsets.
Now if only they figured out how to make a stable processor and chipset platform for that processor... *COUGH*C3 SUCKS*COUGH*
Hopefully their C7 Nano is much better, but ive never really looked into it.
I second that in so many ways. It was my first, my last, my every(very first enthusiast motherbaord)thing!
All good things..