Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit to Rehear Rambus Cases

Rehearing of Oral Arguments to Take Place October 7, 2010
LOS ALTOS, Calif.–(Business Wire)–
Rambus Inc. (Nasdaq:RMBS), one of the world`s premier technology licensing
companies, today announced that it has received notification from the U.S. Court
of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (CAFC) ordering the rehearing of arguments to
take place on October 7, 2010. This follows an initial hearing held in April
2010 in the cases with Hynix Semiconductor (000660.KS) and Micron Technology
Inc. (Nasdaq:MU).

“In spite of this delay, we remain confident in our position,” said Thomas
Lavelle, senior vice president and general counsel at Rambus. “We will
vigorously argue our right to defend and be fairly compensated for use of our
patented innovations borne of years of work by Rambus scientists and engineers.”

About Rambus Inc.

Rambus is one of the world`s premier technology licensing companies. Founded in
1990, the Company specializes in the invention and design of architectures
focused on enhancing the end-user experience of electronic systems. Rambus`
patented innovations and breakthrough technologies help industry-leading
companies bring superior products to market. Rambus licenses both its
world-class patent portfolio, as well as its family of leadership and
industry-standard solutions. Headquartered in Los Altos, California, Rambus has
regional offices in North Carolina, Ohio, India, Germany, Japan, and Taiwan.
Additional information is available at www.rambus.com.

RMBSLN

Rambus Public Relations
Linda Ashmore, 650-947-5411 (Press)
lashmore@rambus.com

Copyright Business Wire 2010

France wants to expand G8 group

L’Aquila (Italy), July 10 (DPA) French President Nicolas Sarkozy is pushing for an expansion of the Group of Eight (G8).
“The G8 are no longer representative enough to manage the economic crisis,” Sarkozy said Thursday in L’Aquila, Italy, after the close of the second day of the summit of the world’s seven leading industrialised democracies plus Russia.

Major emerging economies including China and India must be brought in for permanent membership, Sarkozy said. France, which takes over the rotating G8 leadership in 2011, intends to create a G14 group, he said.

“It’s unavoidable,” he said. “We must include these countries in discussions from the very beginning. There’s no way around it.”

Sarkozy expressed support for similar efforts to expand the UN’ most important decision-making body, the Security Council. He wants the permanent members to include Germany, Japan and India.

The suggestions are not new. The current permanent members, who have the power of veto over any Security Council resolution, are the World War II victors: China, Russia, the US, France and Britain. Other large contributors to the UN including Japan and European countries are pushing for equal clout.

Sarkozy questioned the continuing dominant role of the US dollar as the global currency.

“The world cannot continue to use just one currency” as its common denominator, he said.

Most of international commerce is calculated in US dollars, and the dollar dominates international financial markets.

Women buy 8 out of 10 wine bottles to drink at home

London, Apr 2 (ANI): Women have invaded men’s terrain a little further – a new study has found that ladies buy eight out of 10 bottles of wine to drink at home.

The study, which shows women as the major buyers of wine, prompts experts to urge wine brands to cater for feminine tastes, reports The Sun.

According to the UK study, 55 per cent of the 1,300 British women quizzed said that red wine was their favourite, followed by 35 per cent who favour white wine and seven per cent rose.

More than half of the British women questioned for Vinexpo said they were not put off by health warnings.

Around 4,306 women across the UK, France, Germany, Japan and the USA were questioned. (ANI)

Benin to support India’s bid for UNSC seat

New Delhi, Mar 4 (ANI): The President of the African nation of Benin, Boni Yayi, on Wednesday pledged support to India’s bid for a permanent seat on the UN Security Council seat.

Yayi, who is on a five-day official visit to India, said his country looked at India as a successful democracy.

“We would like to support India in its candidature for the Security Council of the United Nations. We believe that we will be able to create a better order in the world with a more reinforced Security Council,” said Yayi.

Talks have been going on to expand the powerful five-nation UN permanent Security Council and accommodate newer member countries. India is vying for a place.

Authorized by the U.N. charter to impose sanctions and dispatch peacekeeping forces, the Security Council currently has five permanent veto-holding members — the United States, Russia, Britain, France and China.

It also has ten members with no veto power who are elected on a regional basis for two-year terms before being replaced by others. The number was set in 1965, after standing at six since the United Nations was founded after World War Two.

Developing countries have long resented the clout of veto-holders on the council, whose composition stems from the post-war balance of power. Most nations agree the body needs to be enlarged, but there is no consensus on how.

One proposal that has long been discussed would give Germany, Japan, India, Brazil and two African states permanent seats, but without an immediate right of veto. There would also be four new nonpermanent seats from around the world.

A rival plan would add ten non-permanent seats and is backed by, among others, Italy and Pakistan, reluctant to see Germany and India respectively get permanent seats. (ANI)