By 1996, VIA established itself as an important supplier of PC components with its chipsets for
Socket 7 platform. With the
Apollo VP3 chipset in 1997 VIA pioneered
AGP support for Socket 7 processors. VIA's market position between 1998 and 2000 derived from the success of its
Pentium III chipsets. Around 2001
Intel discontinued the development of its
SDRAM chipsets, and stated as policy that only RDRAM memory would be supported going forward. Since
RDRAM was more expensive and offered few, if any, obvious performance advantages, manufacturers found they could ship performance-equivalent PCs at a lower cost by using VIA chipsets. In response to increasing market competition, VIA acquired the ailing
S3 Graphics business in 2001. While the S3 Savage chipset was not fast enough to survive as a discrete graphics product, its low manufacturing cost made it an ideal for integration with the VIA
northbridge. At the time under VIA, the S3 brand generally held about 10% share of the PC graphics market, behind
Intel and
Nvidia. VIA also included the
VIA Envy soundcard on its motherboards, which offered 24-bit sound. While its
Pentium 4 chipset designs struggled to win market share in the face of legal threats from Intel, the
K8T800 chipset for the
Athlon 64 was popular. In 2008, VIA left the support chipset business for Intel and AMD CPUs, claiming that the market for third party chipsets had all but disappeared and that it needed to concentrate on its own platform. From 2004 to 2012, VIA continued the development of its
VIA C3 and
VIA C7 as well as other x86 and x86-64 compatible processors, targeting small, light, low power applications, a market space in which VIA continues to be successful. For example, in January 2008, VIA unveiled the
VIA Nano, an 11 mm × 11 mm footprint VM-enabled
x86-64 processor, which debuted in May 2008, for
ultra-mobile PCs. By 2013 with its
Zhaoxin joint-venture, VIA continued to create x86-64 compatible CPU designs derived from their 1999 purchase of Centaur Technologies and integrated-graphics systems, owing to VIA's earlier relationship and eventual 2001 purchase of S3 Graphics. ==Legal issues==