European Union Steps Up Probe Of Intel

The European Commission it is stepping up its investigation into Intel's business practices by asking four European countries why they favor processors made by the U.S. semiconductor leader.

October 13, 2004

2 Min Read
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In a signal from the European Commission that it is stepping up its investigation into possible illegal business practices by Intel, the commission is asking four European countries why they favor processors made by the U.S. semiconductor firm.

The move came just days after a U.S. judge ruled that Intel's arch rival, Advanced Micro Devices, could not use Intel documents produced in a U.S. case for the European investigation. The value of the documents has been in doubt anyway, because the EU has indicated it doesn't need them.

In petitioning France, the Netherlands, Finland, and Sweden for data on their public tenders for processors, the EU served notice that it is expanding its investigation. Previously, it had petitioned Germany and Italy, asking those governments to justify their requirements that favored Intel processors in their computer purchases.

In its notices announced Wednesday, the EU said it gave the four governments two months to reply or they will be served with an order "to rectify irregularities in the award of these contracts."

The EU previously said its examination of Intel was initiated after Intel competitors complained. AMD has complained of what it calls Intel's unfair sales practices in Europe, although the EU has not singled out AMD as a complainant against Intel in its current case against.

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2004-10-13T16:14:00Z 2004-10-13T16:14:00Z 2004-10-13T16:14:00Z

BelAir Networks said this week that it has upgraded its BelAir200 wireless wide area networking platform. Network Computing

Wireless

Wireless BelAir Networks said this week that it has upgraded its BelAir200 wireless wide area networking platform.The platform is used by wireless ISPs (WISPs) and other providers to provide Wi-Fi over large areas. The new platform supports 802.1x wireless security, rogue access point detection, Multiple Service Set Identifiers (MMSIDs) and simpler network management, the company said in a statement.

BelAir's upgraded system, and particularly the MMSID capabilities, enables providers to create multiple independent networks using the same infrastructure. The company said that enables, for instance, venues such as hotels to create public access for guests and private, secured access for hotel operations.

The upgraded platform is available now, according to the company.

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