Mar 18
Filed under: Portable Video
As expected, the European Commission just did the obvious and made the EU’s de facto DVB-H standard, standard. The move is expected to accelerate the deployment of mobile television services across Europe in the same way that GSM standardization in the early 90s gave Europe a head-start on backwater cellular locations like North America. So get outta Dodge Qualcomm and South Korea with your MediaFLO and DMB mobile television technologies, you aren’t welcome around Brussels anymore.
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Source: Thomas Ricker
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Mar 13
Filed under: Cellphones
You know, we’ll actually be a little sad when the endless legal battle between Nokia and Qualcomm actually comes to an end — but until then, we’re going to revel in all the dirt that comes out of having over a dozen simultaneous lawsuits going worldwide. Nokia now says that it owes Qualcomm nothing for its “early” CDMA patents, because it’s dropped a cool billion dollars into license payments for them over the past 15 years and those deals have expired, so it’s in the clear now. As you might expect, Qualcomm disagrees, and says that if Nokia wants to keep using its tech, it’s got to pay up — that’s on top of the estimated $500 million a year Nokia’s already paying Qualcomm for other patents. Guys, guys, why fight like this? What’s a couple billion a year between friends? Video summary of the entire dispute after the break.
[Via MocoNews]Continue reading Nokia says it’s spent over $1B on Qualcomm patent payments, can it please go now
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Source: Nilay Patel
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Mar 03
Filed under: Cellphones
Just days after the ITC upheld a December ruling that stated that Nokia did not violate Qualcomm patents, the UK High Court has handed down its decision on a lawsuit initially filed in May of 2006. If you’ll recall, the case involved Nokia’s GSM / GPRS / EDGE-only handsets and a pair of Qualcomm’s patents “that cover certain power saving and power control technologies.” Nearly two years after the spat got real, the court has ruled that “although the Nokia accused products included the patented technologies, the power saving patent is invalid and that the power control patent is partially valid but, insofar as it is valid, is not infringed by Nokia.” Granted, we reckon that could have been spilled out with fewer complexities, but the end result has Qualcomm considering “whether to seek permission from the UK court to amend the patents and appeal the decision.” Please, just let it go.
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Source: Darren Murph
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Feb 25
Filed under: Cellphones
There’s no love lost between Nokia and Qualcomm — the two companies have been suing each other willy-nilly for a year and half now — but it looks like they’ve agreed to stop the vicious procedural and technical legal maneuvering that’s marked the dispute so far and make a go at actually resolving some issues. That’s right, after filing nearly a dozen lawsuits and engaging in an endless war of paperwork, the two companies have agreed to sit down with their arbitrator and figure out who owes who how much, and who gets the kids patent licensing rights. Still, it’s not over over — only two cases are being consolidated before the arbitrator, and although Nokia and Qualcomm say they’ve agreed to postpone the other outstanding cases and hold off on filing any more lawsuits, we’d say there’s just too much bad blood here for things to end this easily.
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Source: Nilay Patel
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Feb 11
hspa, HewlettPackard, dual 3g, Dual3g, mdm1000, Hewlett-Packard, Hewlett Packard, hsdpa, qualcomm, ev-do, hsupa, evdo, hp
Filed under: Laptops, Wireless
It’s not all just cellphones at Mobile World Congress — HP and Qualcomm have just announced plans to ship laptops with Qualcomm’s Gobi dual-3G chipset that supports both EV-DO and HSPA. That means you won’t be locked into a carrier when you buy a laptop with an integrated WWAN modem — and hardcore road warriors with multiple subscriptions will even be able to switch on the fly to the network with better coverage. HP says Gobi (officially the MDM1000 chip, but that’s no fun) will be available on a range of laptops from ultraportables to high-performance models later this year, but there’s no word on pricing just yet — let’s hope it falls into the “might as well” range, eh?
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Source: Nilay Patel
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Jan 30
Filed under: Cellphones, GPS, Handhelds
In case you missed it, the biggest trend in GPS navigators at the moment is real-time, two-way data feeds for traffic updates. There’s the Dash Express of course, and TomTom’s ONE XL HD Traffic GPS navigator with real-time traffic feeds provided over Vodafone’s GSM network. Now Mio is looking for a piece of that action with some help from Qualcomm. The collaboration brings Qualcomm’s QST1100 chipset to the mix for real-time traffic updates (presumably two-way, or why bother), voice calling, search, and the always intriguing, “more.” Details on the chipset are few. We do know that it features assisted-GPS, Standalone-GPS and gpsOneXTRA Assistance technology. How very marketingy. While no date for a device launch was provided, we have a funny feeling that one of MIO’s prototypes spotted at CES or perhaps that Qualcomm reference design is due for mass assembly sometime soon.
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Source: Thomas Ricker
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Jan 11
Filed under: Cellphones, CES, Handhelds

We seriously have no idea what Qualcomm was thinking here, but it turns out that those two so-called “Snapdragon prototypes” being shown at CES this year… wait for it… don’t use the Snapdragon platform. Now, that would’ve been just fine with us had Qualcomm made it clear that they were built using its existing chipsets, but they didn’t. Here’s the best part: Qualcomm actually contacted us with a minor correction on our original story (they wanted us to point out that their ARM-based cores are highly customized) without bothering to mention that our “Snapdragon-powered” statement was not accurate. Anyway, it turns out that the Anchorage and Fairbanks prototypes are merely meant to demonstrate “examples of what Snapdragon-enabled devices will feature,” which begs the question: if the current MSM series chipsets are capable of the same functionality, aren’t those probably the wrong features to be demonstrating? That behavior walks a fine line between poorly executed PR and outright deception, Qualcomm, and we’d ask that you not let it happen again.
[Thanks, Sascha]
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Source: Chris Ziegler
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Jan 10
hands-on, anchorage, snapdragon, reference, HandsOn, hands on, ces 2008, Ces2008, prototype, qualcomm, ces
Filed under: Cellphones, CES, Features, Handhelds
We sat down with one of Qualcomm’s fancy new reference designs today, the Anchorage QWERTY slider phone. Let’s be perfectly clear — the Inventec-crafted device won’t ever see the light of day in this exact form, Qualcomm just needed some eye candy with which to demonstrate its new Snapdragon platform. The chipset features an ARM-based core and graphics from ATI — both actually licensed this time around, we’re told — and tries to take advantage of as many technologies that Snapdragon offers as possible: MediaFLO support, blazing clock speeds (1GHz to be exact), high resolutions (SVGA here), and the list goes on. Snapdragon-powered devices should hit retail from HTC and Samsung by the end of the year. Click on for pics, just don’t get too attached since this is as close as you’ll ever get to it, alright?
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Source: Chris Ziegler
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