Apple countersues Nokia for infringing 13 patents

So much for making nice. Apple just announced that it’s countersuing Nokia for infringing thirteen of its patents — slightly upping Nokia’s claim that Apple’s infringing ten. We haven’t seen the case yet, but we’ll post it up for you as soon as we find it — and as we predicted in our breakdown of Nokia’s complaint, this is shaping up to be a long and costly nightmare of a suit. Hey, do you think Apple general counsel Bruce Sewell might have a crazy lightning rod of a statement about the case for us?

“Other companies must compete with us by inventing their own technologies, not just by stealing ours,” said Bruce Sewell, Apple’s General Counsel and senior vice president.

Cool, thanks. We’ll be in the corner under a Nomex blanket for the next few months.

Update: Here’s the PDF of the reply — we’re still reading all 79 pages of it, but it’s what we expected: Apple says Nokia’s patents aren’t actually essential to GSM / UMTS, denies infringing them, and says they’re invalid and / or unenforceable anyway. Apple also says Nokia wanted unreasonable license terms for the patents, including a cross-license for Apple’s various iPhone device patents as part of any deal, which Apple clearly wasn’t willing to do. That’s in stark contrast to what Nokia says it wants in its lawsuit — all it’s asked the court for is past due license fees on its patents. (Which is odd, if you think about it: Nokia wouldn’t come to terms on a license that didn’t include iPhone patents, but it’ll spend the cash on litigation for past due fees? That seems silly.) Oh, and if you’re just in this for the bitchy quotes, here you go:

As Anssi Vanjoki, Nokia’s executive Vice President and General Manager of Multimedia, stated at Nokia’s GoPlay event in 2007 when asked about the similarities of Nokia’s new offerings to the already released iPhone:”[i]f there is something good in the world, we copy with pride.” True to this quote, Nokia has demonstrated its willingness to copy Apple’s iPhone ideas as well as Apple’s basic computing technologies, all while demanding Apple pay for access to Nokia’s purported standards essential patent.

We’ll let you know if we see anything else of interest, but we’d say we’re in for a long, bumpy ride here.

Apple countersues Nokia for infringing 13 patents originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 11 Dec 2009 10:55:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Intel forks over the $1.25 billion settlement to AMD, apparently had it ‘just laying around’

Remember that time you owed your buddy for the take out and then you found $20 in the couch? This is kind of like that. Except instead of “take out” we’re talking “accusations of anticompetitive practices and stolen IP,” and instead of “$20” we’re referring to the $1.25 billion check that Intel just shot into the arm of AMD, as per agreement. Intel certainly isn’t out of the woods yet with this anticompetitive stuff, but with the biggest CPU monkey off its back and some fancy patent cross-licensing between the companies, we should hopefully see the benefits of this in better and faster chips from both chip giants in the somewhat distant future.

Intel forks over the $1.25 billion settlement to AMD, apparently had it ‘just laying around’ originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 11 Dec 2009 10:49:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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VIA’s power-sipping VN1000 chipset brings Blu-ray playback, DX 10.1 support to low-end rigs

VIA may not have the clout that AMD or Intel have, but one thing’s for sure: these guys sure love to bring as much heat as possible to the broke-as-a-joke among us. Take the all new VN1000 chipset, for instance, which is designed for Windows 7-based all-in-one PCs and other low-end desktops that yearn for the ability to handle modern day multimedia. The chipset is compatible with VIA’s range of Nano, C7, C7-M and Eden processors, and aside from supporting DDR3 memory, up to five PCI slots, up to four SATA II drives, a multicard reader and 12 USB 2.0 ports, it also allows for Blu-ray playback. Users can slap up to 16GB of RAM around it, and the integrated Chrome 520 GPU is apparently potent enough to support DirectX 10.1 and BD films. Who says 1080p is reserved for royalty?

VIA’s power-sipping VN1000 chipset brings Blu-ray playback, DX 10.1 support to low-end rigs originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 11 Dec 2009 10:23:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Friday Poll: The best way to read a book in 2010?

Which e-reader do you like best, Crave readers? Or maybe you just prefer old-fashioned paper?

The 30 Essential Android Apps

In a year, Android’s gone from shaky upstart to mobile juggernaut. And nowhere is that more apparent than the apps—the Marketplace is positively bursting, with over 14,000 apps. Here are the ones you need, the essentials.

If you want them all on one page, click here.

If we’ve missed anything or you’ve got a superior alternative, let us know in the comments, since you vastly outnumber us. By ‘us’ I mean me.

Keepin’ it real fake, part CCXLVI: MP3/AVI/MP4 Player has ‘stylish designer style’ courtesy of Apple

Keepin' it real fake, part CCXLVI: MP3/AVI/MP4 Player has 'stylish designer style' courtesy of Apple

It doesn’t get much better than this, folks. If KIRF is an art form this right here is your Mona Lisa, your Starry Night, your… painting with that dude screaming on a wharf. You know the one. Anyway, this is about the best iPod Nano knockoff we’ve ever seen, cloning that flat, proprietary connector and sporting a UI that would make the most ardent of Apple fanboys look twice. It has a camera on the back like the 5G, but trumps the Nano with support for a predictably wide suite of file formats and a price of just $33.25. A bargain, so long as you don’t mind the measly 2GB of storage and the nagging sense of guilt that comes with buying a fake — even if it is a spectacularly good one.

[Thanks, Larry]

Keepin’ it real fake, part CCXLVI: MP3/AVI/MP4 Player has ‘stylish designer style’ courtesy of Apple originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 11 Dec 2009 09:55:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Lightsaber Chopsticks

chopsticks

Star Wars was pretty obviously a rip off of Samurai movies, right down to the lightsabers and Darth Vader’s outfit. So what better to celebrate George Lucas’ “homage” to Japan than a pair of “Lightsaber Chopsticks”?

For just ¥2,900 ($33) you can pop sushi into your mouth with this most honorable of weapons, and because they are made of plastic instead of beams of dangerous light, your cake-hole should remain safe throughout the meal. Choose between Vader’s (red) Luke’s (blue) and Yoda’s (a kind of yellowish green, apparently) colors. Delicious! The wasabi is strong in this one.

Lightsaber Chopsticks [Geek Stuff 4U]


Michael Arrington Files Suit Against, Talks Trash About Fusion Garage

TechCrunch founder Michael Arrington today broke his silence on the topic of the JooJoo tablet this week by filing a suit against its manufacturer, Fusion Garage. Arrington filed the suit in a Northern California suit, citing Fraud and Deceit, Breach of Fiduciary Duty, Misappropriation of Business Ideas, Unfair Competition, and more.

Arrington used the occasion to outline pieces of his defense. He also happily took some shots against the company in a blog post, writing,

Fusion Garage is, and always has been, a company on the edge of going out of business. Their main shareholder, the guy who wrote the now infamous email telling us that we were no longer part of the project, is a chiropractor named Bruce Lee. The company was constantly raising debt from unsavory investors, borderline loansharks, to make payroll.

He also warned that Fusion Garage “[doesn’t have] the cash flow to build the [JooJoo].” Arrington closed his post by taking some shots against Fusion Garage founder, Chandra Rathakrishan. “The founder of Fusion Garage, Chandrasekar Rathakrishnan, isn’t a good guy. He has been caught plagiarizing articles. His previous company Radixs disintegrated in shareholder disputes and angry employees.”

Nokia taking Ovi Store criticism to heart, planning revamped version to rival App Store

Not quite sure if you’ve noticed, but some pretty significant shifting is going on in the heart of Espoo. Just days after Nokia announced that it would be closing up its flagship shops in London, New York and Chicago, in flies this: a new Ovi Store is already in the works, and if all goes well, it’ll be available for public use as early as next Spring. For those keeping tabs, that’s right around a year after the (admittedly tumultuous) launch of the existing platform, which has yet to live up to the firm’s own expectations according to George Linardos. In case you’re wondering (and c’mon, you’re wondering), Mr. Linardos is the head of products at Nokia’s media group, and in speaking with the Financial Times, he confessed that the Ovi Store “had been outpaced by Apple.” He also admitted that the chorus of complaints from end-users were driving the next version, noting that his company has “screens up in [their] offices running Twitter feeds [of gripes] all day long.” In fact, he likened the act to “sitting there and getting punched in the face.”

As for the next go ’round, he’s looking to take a “tortoise and hare” approach when it comes to competing with Apple, who he himself claims “radically changed” the world around us when the App Store was introduced. As it stands, George sees the Ovi Store as a “jambalaya” of services, with Ben Wood — an analyst at CCS Insight — proclaiming that “none of those [work] properly.” In the future, Ben has confessed that Ovi needs “to get all their ducks lined up, including hardware, software and services.” So, what exactly will said ducks look like early next year? We’re told that new features will include “in-application payments, a redesigned user interface that makes apps easier to discover and faster operation,” and beyond that, the outfit is also looking to toss in recommendations based on the app purchases of their friends. This is definitely stirring stuff to hear from someone deep within Nokia’s lairs, and it certainly makes us all the more excited to see what the next generation will bring. Nothing like a little competition in the market place to really light a fire up under someone’s posterior, right?

Nokia taking Ovi Store criticism to heart, planning revamped version to rival App Store originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 11 Dec 2009 09:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Jolicloud pre-beta now available to download, walkthrough now available for viewing

Let’s face it: Chrome OS has been snagging all of the attention in the OS world here lately, but let us not forget about Jolicloud. The Linux-based system, which was designed to be installed onto existing netbooks without much of a fuss, has finally reached its public pre-beta stage. In other words, the 600MB .exe file is now out for you and yours to download and try, and according to our good pals over at Download Squad, it’s well worth the effort. They seemed to have no issues whatsoever installing it as a second OS on their machine, and they went ahead and deemed it superior to Chrome OS’ earliest build due to its ability to support “both native and web-based applications equally well.” Their own tests found it to boot in just 15 seconds on an Eee PC netbook, but if you’re still curious if dipping your toes is the best move, hop on past the break for a lengthy walkthrough video.

Continue reading Jolicloud pre-beta now available to download, walkthrough now available for viewing

Jolicloud pre-beta now available to download, walkthrough now available for viewing originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 11 Dec 2009 09:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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