Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, April 29 2012 @ 04:42 PM EDT |
Samsung Passes Nokia to Become World’s No. 1 Phone
Maker
Uhuh, if you thought Apple were secretive, read on
Who's the King of Smartphone Sales? PCWorld
How Many Smartphones
Sold, Samsung? PCMag
Samsung coyness puts smartphone crown in dispute
NDTV
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Authored by: PJ on Sunday, April 29 2012 @ 08:28 PM EDT |
welcome [ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, April 29 2012 @ 09:08 PM EDT |
If you look at it from the patent licensing angle, wouldn't there be a bigger
chance of Kaffe, GCJ, SableVM and JamVM violating Sun's patents than Dalvik
(okay maybe not GCJ :p)?[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: Gringo_ on Sunday, April 29 2012 @ 11:49 PM EDT |
I was really impressed with the selection of articles
about the trial
presented to me under news picks. The
article by Ken Fox was an excellent
explanation of the
situation re: the API, one of the best I have seen in spite
of all the talented thoughts about the API Groklaw
commenters have
rendered.
I especially enjoyed "Oracle vs. Google: Dead lawsuit
walking". I noted the comments to that were all from shills.
This trial has
attracted two kinds of shills: Patent
attorneys who lick their chops at the
thought of the
windfall that would come for them once it is decided that
APIs
can be copyrighted, and the "Google is Evil" shills who
take their cue from
Microsoft. [ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: Steve Martin on Monday, April 30 2012 @ 06:33 AM EDT |
If you cover intellectual property law issues for years, as I
had, you knew that while Müller started as an anti-patent activist, in recent
years hes been an analyst for hire for Microsoft and Oracle. Essentially, he’s a
lobbyist for Oracle. Never-the-less, many reports used his
pro-Oracle/anti-Google takes as facts in their news
stories.
Ouch!
--- "When I say something, I put my
name next to it." -- Isaac Jaffe, "Sports Night" [ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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- Heh - Authored by: hardmath on Monday, April 30 2012 @ 07:00 AM EDT
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Authored by: Anonymous on Monday, April 30 2012 @ 08:01 AM EDT |
Maybe unrelated, but maybe related (in some kind of end game
way, that would require digging down some rabbit holes to
figure out)?
MS has a ton of patents on DRM (spent a lot of money buying
companies that had such IP in the years past).
Can privacy mean self use of encryption at all, where the
customer basically builds a DRM wall around their data? If
so, then who is in a good place to sell this, and license
such tech (or sue) over it?
Any path toward protection of copyright materials (self
owned in a cloud materials of everyone is copyrighted
materials, unless in a creative commons license, and that is
copyrighted too), yet, if encrypted, they might think that
they are holding the cards, and so, the question is this -
when they talk to those in Washington, what do they tell
them is the best thing to do?
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Authored by: Anonymous on Monday, April 30 2012 @ 08:17 AM EDT |
LINK
All I can say is yuck. and I am very disapointed.
DACII not logged in. [ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: Anonymous on Monday, April 30 2012 @ 09:58 AM EDT |
B&N Press
release
Barnes & Noble and
Microsoft Form Strategic Partnership
to Advance World-Class Digital Reading
Experiences for
Consumers.
I guess the litigation was getting too
expensive. [ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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