Between the Lines

Larry Dignan, Andrew Nusca and Rachel King

Quanta sues AMD over 'defective chips'

By | January 5, 2012, 2:42am PST

Summary: Chipmaker AMD is being sued by Quanta, the largest contract manufacturer of laptops worldwide, after the company alleges AMD sold defective chips.

Taiwan-based Quanta Computer, the world’s largest contract manufacturer of laptops, is suing chip giant AMD for breach of contract, saying the chipmaker sold defective products.

Bloomberg reports that Quanta filed suit against AMD in San Jose, California, claiming that the sold chips did not meet industry-standard heat tolerance processes.

Quanta builds laptops for Acer, Dell, HP and others, including NEC. The company builds the systems that are then rebranded and essentially made to look like another manufacturer’s brand. The chips in this case were used in notebooks Quanta build for NEC, but allegedly caused the computers to fail.

AMD is the second-largest chipmaker in the world behind Intel; a $6 billion in annual revenue versus over $50 billion in annual revenue respectively.

The suit centers around the ATI RS600ME, an integrated graphics chip, according to sister site CNET. ATI was acquired by AMD in 2006.

The suit also claims breach of warranty and civil fraud.

Quanta has suffered significant injury to prospective revenue and profits”, the company said in the complaint, according to Bloomberg.

But AMD “disputes the allegations” and believes they are “without merit”, the company said in a statement.

“AMD is aware of no other customer reports of the alleged issues with the AMD chip that Quanta used, which AMD no longer sells. In fact, Quanta has itself acknowledged to AMD that it used the identical chip in large volumes in a different computer platform that it manufactured for NEC without such issues”.

Quanta seeks both damages and a jury trial in its filing.

Related:

Kick off your day with ZDNet's daily e-mail newsletter. It's the freshest tech news and opinion, served hot. Get it.

Topics

Zack Whittaker, a criminologist who studied at the University of Kent, Canterbury, is a journalist, writer and broadcaster.

Disclosure

Zack Whittaker

I worked briefly with Microsoft UK in 2006 but no longer have any connection with the company. Regardless, I remain impartial and unbiased in my views.

I don't hold any stock or shares, investments or industrial secrets in any company, but have signed confidentiality agreements with a number of UK and U.S. organisations, whose names I am not at liberty to disclose.

I was involved with Kent Union, the University of Kent's student union, undertaking voluntary, non-salaried, elected positions between early 2009 and mid-2010.

No other company, body, government department, non-governmental organisation or third sector organisation employs me or pays me a salary in any capacity whatsoever.

As a freelance journalist, whenever expenses are given and taken by a company that is not CBS Interactive, these will be disclosed in each relevant post to ensure transparency.

I currently work with a UK law enforcement unit, but this is an entirely separate position which bears no connection to other work.

(Updated: 23rd October 2011)

Biography

Zack Whittaker

Zack Whittaker, criminologist who studied at the University of Kent, UK, is a journalist, writer and broadcaster.

After studying criminology at university, though still in his early-20's, he has already had a series unconventional work and voluntary positions. He has worked with researchers studying neurological illnesses like Tourette's syndrome (which he suffers from), has given lectures on the nature of disabilities in the public community, and occasionally ends up speaking on television and radio discussing the events of the day.

He first had academic work published at the age of 22, then still an undergraduate, and has been cited by a wide range of publications: from CNN, the Huffington Post, AllThingsDigital, The Atlantic Wire and CBS News.

5
Comments

Join the conversation!

Just In

RE: Quanta sues AMD over 'defective chips'
fliptron 6th Jan
Reminds me of the Acer laptops with AMD chipsets from around 2005-2007 where the chip (SoutBridge) for the the usb ports and keybord failed in very high percentage, after the warranty ran out. That was cold soldering problem, of course, totally ignored by Acer.
So yea, this doesn't sound like an AMD CPU problem. Sounds more like Quanta screwed up somewhere when building these things.
0 Votes
+ -
AMD's second claim is going to be the crux. If they can prove it, Quanta probably loses.
0 Votes
+ -
But this sounds exactly like the problem Apple had with the Nvidia 8600M graphics engine in the late 2000's. Many of the parts worked perfectly but some in the same application had the tendancy to overheat and shut down.
Apple no longer works with Nvidia.
Nvidia mobile graphics chips were also id'd as failure prone in HP, Dell and Lenovo laptops during that time.

Join the conversation!

Formatting +
BB Codes - Note: HTML is not supported in forums
  • [b] Bold [/b]
  • [i] Italic [/i]
  • [u] Underline [/u]
  • [s] Strikethrough [/s]
  • [q] "Quote" [/q]
  • [ol][*] 1. Ordered List [/ol]
  • [ul][*] · Unordered List [/ul]
  • [pre] Preformat [/pre]
  • [quote] "Blockquote" [/quote]
ie8 fix

The best of ZDNet, delivered

ZDNet Newsletters

Get the best of ZDNet delivered straight to your inbox

Facebook Activity

White Papers, Webcasts, & Resources
ie8 fix