T-Mobile Exec Says Network Won’t Get iPhone 5 This Year

Will the iPhone be coming to T-Mobile? Not this year, it seems.

Update: This story was updated with comment from T-Mobile September 20, 2011 at 4:15 p.m. PST.

Sorry, T-Mobile customers: The outlook on Apple products coming to the wireless network soon is not so good.

“We are not going to get the iPhone 5 this year,” T-Mobile’s chief marketing officer Cole Brodman said in a town hall meeting on Monday.

Brodman’s statement could still be interpreted a number of ways. T-Mobile could get the iPhone early next year, or it might be an attempt to divert attention from possible signs that they may be getting the iPhone (something Sprint appears to be doing a terrible job of hiding). TmoNews speculates that it would also make sense for Apple to potentially hold off on porting a phone to T-Mobile’s network when it could possibly get swallowed up by AT&T in its proposed merger.

T-Mobile said in an official statement: “We don’t comment on rumors. We remain focused on expanding our portfolio of 4G smartphones. We look forward to sharing on Monday, news about our latest and greatest product lineup.”

For several years, AT&T was the exclusive carrier for the iPhone, until Verizon began selling the iPhone 4 for its CDMA network in February 2011. Rumors and analyst speculation have widely suggested that Sprint will be getting the iPhone 5 when it debuts (likely in October), which would leave T-Mobile as the lone major U.S. wireless carrier to be without an Apple phone.

Sprint has blocked out vacation days for its employees from September 30 to October 15 in order to prep for a “major phone launch.” Sprint staff have reportedly been briefed on the iPhone 4. And other reports suggest that Sprint will even offer an unlimited data plan for the iPhone.

Recent speculation also suggests that we may be getting an incrementally updated or cheaper iPhone this year, but we won’t see an iPhone 5 until 2012.

Of course, all of this is still speculation, so keep your grains of salt at the ready.

[Via T-Mo News]


T-Mobile CMO: no iPhone 5 on our network this year

Hopes and dreams = shot. We’ve had a sneaky suspicion all along that T-Mobile would likely be the only major network not playing host to an iPhone 5 launch party this year, but we still kept our heads high because no official denial had been given from the company’s C-level. That’s now changed, since T-Mobile CMO Cole Brodman slammed us back into reality at a town hall meeting stating: “we are not going to get the iPhone 5 this year.” It’s a hard pill to swallow in such a short summation, but there might be a glimmer of hope — technically Brodman only referenced one specific name. Since there’s always a possibility that Apple will choose a different title for its fifth-gen device (or even add a lower-priced option), T-Mobile fans can still grasp onto one last Hail Mary of a chance; just don’t set yourself up for more disappointment, okay?

T-Mobile CMO: no iPhone 5 on our network this year originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 20 Sep 2011 13:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Instagram goes 2.0, gets even more filter-happy

Exceedingly popular iPhone photo app Instagram is celebrating its big (version) 2.0 with the addition of a number of new features. At the top of the list is Live Filters, which let you view images through effects in real-time, before taking a photo. Filters have been sped up post-picture taking as well, as has the tilt-shift function. The revamped app also introduces the Amaro, Rise, Hudson and Valencia filters and high-res photos at up to 1936 x 1936 on the iPhone 4. The app is getting a new icon and a few smaller tweaks like the ability to turn off borders. That long-awaited Android app is still conspicuously absent, however.

Instagram goes 2.0, gets even more filter-happy originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 20 Sep 2011 13:20:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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How Did Scarlett Johansson’s Phone Get Hacked?

When naked pictures of Scarlett Johansson hit the internet, take notice—but not for that reason. More »

Burton Wireless iPod-Controlling Gloves Cost More than an iPod

Burton’s iPhone-controlling gloves cost ‘just’ $160

I might never have been near a snowboard, but I can see how these iPhone-remote gloves from Burton could be really, ahem, handy. The Burton Mix Master Glove/Mitt doubles as a wireless controller for your iDevice while the phone itself sits safely inside a cozy, warm pocket.

Instead of running cables through clothes, the Mix Master communicates with the iPhone or iPod via an RF dongle which plugs into the dock connector. Thus prepared, you can press buttons on the back of your hand to skip and play/pause your music, and adjust the volume.

The gloves themselves have leather palms, and are covered with a breathable, weatherproof, wicking membrane so your hands stay dry.

The only problem might be the price. At $160, you could afford to buy an iPod Nano and put that on the back of any regular mitten.

Mix Master Glove [Burton]

See Also:


Lion Ultimatum brings desktop-like functionality and file manager to jailbroken iOS (video)

Sure, OS X Lion borrowed many of its design cues from Apple’s iOS platform, but now users of jailbroken iPhone and iPod Touch devices may bring much of the desktop Mac’s functionality onto their handset with Lion Ultimatum. In essence, this beta project is a theme for Dreamboard (which is required software), but it’s rather far-reaching, with a functional file manager and Finder menus, a scrollable dock and draggable windows, along with Stacks, Launchpad, Mission Control and Dashboard. There’s also a customizable lock screen that provides access to the dialer, email and messages. Even the keyboard can be modified to resemble the design of MacBook Pro or the traditional Apple Keyboard, thanks to integration with ColorKeyboard. If you’re thirsty for more, hop the break for an extended video preview, or just follow the source for the full install instructions.

[Thanks, Adam]

Continue reading Lion Ultimatum brings desktop-like functionality and file manager to jailbroken iOS (video)

Lion Ultimatum brings desktop-like functionality and file manager to jailbroken iOS (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 19 Sep 2011 22:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Technabob, Lifehacker, TiPb  |  sourceModMyi  | Email this | Comments

Samsung moves to block iPhone 5 in Korea, expands its anti-Apple offensive

Samsung Vs. Apple

Well, since Samsung couldn’t get an early peek at the iPhone 5 and iPad 3, the company has simply decided to take a page from Apple’s playbook. A senior exec told The Korea Times it plans to file a request to block the sale of the upcoming iOS handset in its Korean homeland the moment the device is announced. According to the Times, the anonymous exec said it would leverage its wireless technology patents and demand that Apple either remove the telecommunications features — turning the iPhone into an iPod touch — or simply be banished from the Korean market. The knock-down-drag-out war between the two companies has only seemed to escalate in recent weeks, as Sammy has taken a much more combative and offensive approach. We can only hope the two get tired of divvying up the globe and declare a draw in this game of patent Risk.

Samsung moves to block iPhone 5 in Korea, expands its anti-Apple offensive originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 19 Sep 2011 12:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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‘It’s Playing’ iOS Video Player With Volume Boost, Gestures

‘It’s playing’ will let you delete a handful of junker apps from your iPad

Move over CineXPlayer: There’s a new iPad video player in town. That should probably read “yet another new iPad video player,” but as most of those are junk, this new app really stands out.

It’s called “It’s playing 2.0,” and it’s another one of those video players which will take pretty much any file you can throw at it and play it without conversions to an iOS-friendly format first. My long-time favorite, thanks to ease of use and reliability, has been CineXPlayer, but it lacks crucial support for AC3 sound. It’s playing adds this and a lot more.

Files can be added via iTunes, or from any other app in iOS which supports the “Open In…” command (Mail and Dropbox are amongst these). Files in roughly one zillion* formats are supported, including FLV, AVI, MKV, OGG and WMV. Also supported are subtitles in separate files, and AC3 audio.

Tap the file in the source list to the left and you can either play it or tweak it. Pressing the info button lets you rename the file, choose a subtitle file (if the subtitle has the same filename as the movie, it will be added automatically). You can also pick subtitle font sizes, and adjust playback quality. “Automatic” is the default, and works fine. I tested it with a 720 x 416 AVI of a Sopranos episode and both the audio and video are smooth and clear.

It’s playing doesn’t use the standard Apple playback controls, and there’s no AirPlay support, but you can do variable-speed scrubbing on the timeline control. Move your finger further from the timeline as you scrub and the speed will slow, just like native iOS audio scrubbing. One and two-fingered swipes will skip forward and back by 30 seconds or five minutes.

But the biggest feature, and one which I haven’t seen elsewhere, is on-the-fly video adjustment and volume boost. You can adjust color, contrast and brightness using sliders in real time as the video plays. And even more important, you can boost the volume up to 200%, VLC-style. I could have done with this last week as the Lady and I struggled to hear the soundtrack of Deadwood as we recovered from food poisoning in a hotel room somewhere in Tunis, Tunisia.

Whether or not you prefer this app to others is down to choice. CineXPlayer’s subtitle selection is easier faster, for example, and Buzz player adds network streaming. But for smooth playback of high-def video, and the excellent picture and volume adjustments, It’s playing is the current champ. Bonus: it costs just $2. Available now.

It’s playing product page [It’s playing.app. Thanks, Diogo!]

* Full list of file formats and codecs below.

See Also:

FILE EXTENSIONS
flv, gvp, xspf, xa, pls, m3u, m3u8, asx, b4s, ape, flac, wv, tta, mpc, ram, rm, rmvb, mod, xm, it, xm, aiff, aif, amr, aob, dts, spx, sdp, wav, vob, a52, ac3, aac, ogm, ogg, oga, ogv, ogx, oma, voc, vqf, anx, axa, axv, gxf, mxf, avi, mov, moov, qt, divx, dv, asf, wma, wmv, wm, mpg, mpeg, mpeg1, mpeg2, m1v, m2a, mp1, mp2, mp3, m2p, ps, ts, m2ts, mts, mt2s, m2v, mpv, mpa, mp4, mpeg4, m4v, m4a, 3gp, mid, mlp, mka, mkv, webm, rec, rmi, s3m, vro, tod, mks, nsv, nuv, ssa, ass, usf, utf, srt, rt, smi, aqt, jss, pjs, psb, sub, mpsub

FORMATS
3GP2 format, 3GP format, 4X Technologies format, IFF format, Funcom ISS format, MTV format, raw id RoQ format, a64 – video for Commodore 64, raw ADTS AAC, raw AC-3, ADTS AAC, MD STUDIO audio, Audio IFF, PCM A-law format, 3GPP AMR file format, Deluxe Paint Animation, CRYO APC format, Monkey’s Audio, Apple HTTP Live Streaming format, ASF format, ASF format, Advanced SubStation Alpha subtitle format, SUN AU format, AVI format, Flash 9 (AVM2) format, AVS format, Bethesda Softworks VID format, Brute Force & Ignorance, Bink, Interplay C93, Apple Core Audio Format, raw Chinese AVS video, CD Graphics Format, CRC testing format, D-Cinema audio format, Chronomaster DFA, raw Dirac, raw DNxHD (SMPTE VC-3), Delphine Software International CIN format, raw DTS, DV video format, MPEG-2 PS format (DVD VOB), DXA, Electronic Arts Multimedia Format, Electronic Arts cdata, raw E-AC-3, PCM 32 bit floating-point big-endian format, PCM 32 bit floating-point little-endian format, PCM 64 bit floating-point big-endian format, PCM 64 bit floating-point little-endian format, FFM (FFserver live feed) format, FFmpeg metadata in text format, Sega FILM/CPK format, Adobe Filmstrip, raw FLAC, FLI/FLC/FLX animation format, FLV format, framecrc testing format, Per-frame MD5 testing format, raw G.722, GIF Animation, raw GSM, GXF format, raw H.261, raw H.263, raw H.264 video format, id Cinematic format, image2 sequence, piped image2 sequence, raw Ingenient MJPEG, Interplay MVE format, iPod H.264 MP4 format, A format generated by IndigoVision 8000 video server, On2 IVF, Bitmap Brothers JV, lmlm4 raw format, VR native stream format (LXF), raw MPEG-4 video format, Matroska file format, Matroska/WebM file format, MD5 testing format, MicroDVD subtitle format, raw MJPEG video, raw MLP, American Laser Games MM format, Yamaha SMAF, MOV format, 3g2,mj2 QuickTime/MPEG-4/Motion JPEG 2000 format, MPEG audio layer 2, MPEG audio layer 3, MP4 format, Musepack, Musepack SV8, MPEG-1 System format, raw MPEG-1 video, raw MPEG-2 video, MPEG-2 transport stream format, MPEG-2 raw transport stream format, raw MPEG video, MIME multipart JPEG format, MSN TCP Webcam stream, PCM mu-law format, Motion Pixels MVI format, Material eXchange Format, Material eXchange Format, D-10 Mapping, MxPEG clip file format, NC camera feed format, Nullsoft Streaming Video, raw null video format, NUT format, NuppelVideo format, Ogg, Sony OpenMG audio, Playstation Portable PMP format, PSP MP4 format, Sony Playstation STR format, TechnoTrend PVA file and stream format, QCP format, REDCODE R3D format, raw video format, VC-1 test bitstream, RL2 format, RealMedia format, RPL/ARMovie format, Lego Mindstorms RSO format, RTP output format, RTSP output format, PCM signed 16 bit big-endian format, PCM signed 16 bit little-endian format, PCM signed 24 bit big-endian format, PCM signed 24 bit little-endian format, PCM signed 32 bit big-endian format, PCM signed 32 bit little-endian format, PCM signed 8 bit format, SAP output format, SDL output device, SDP, raw Shorten, Beam Software SIFF, Smacker video, Sierra SOL format, SoX native format, IEC 61937 (used on S/PDIF – IEC958), SubRip subtitle format, MPEG-2 PS format (VOB), Flash format, THP, Tiertex Limited SEQ format, 8088flex TMV, raw TrueHD, True Audio, Tele-typewriter, Renderware TeXture Dictionary, PCM unsigned 16 bit big-endian format, PCM unsigned 16 bit little-endian format, PCM unsigned 24 bit big-endian format, PCM unsigned 24 bit little-endian format, PCM unsigned 32 bit big-endian format, PCM unsigned 32 bit little-endian format, PCM unsigned 8 bit format, raw VC-1, VC-1 test bitstream format, MPEG-1 System format (VCD), Sierra VMD format, MPEG-2 PS format (VOB), Creative Voice file format, Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corporation (NTT) TwinVQ, Sony Wave64 format, WAV format, Wing Commander III movie format, WebM file format, Westwood Studios audio format, Westwood Studios VQA format, Windows Television (WTV), WavPack, Maxis XA File Format, Microsoft xWMA, Psygnosis YOP Format, YUV4MPEG pipe format

CODECS
4X Movie, QuickTime 8BPS video, 8SVX exponential, 8SVX fibonacci, 8SVX rawaudio, Multicolor charset for Commodore 64, Multicolor charset for Commodore 64, extended with 5th color (colram), Advanced Audio Coding, AAC LATM (Advanced Audio Codec LATM syntax), Autodesk RLE, ATSC A/52A (AC-3), ATSC A/52A (AC-3), ADPCM 4X Movie, SEGA CRI ADX ADPCM, ADPCM Creative Technology, ADPCM Electronic Arts, a ADPCM Electronic Arts Maxis CDROM XA, ADPCM Electronic Arts R1, ADPCM Electronic Arts R2, ADPCM Electronic Arts R3, ADPCM Electronic Arts XAS, ADPCM IMA AMV, ADPCM IMA Duck DK3, ADPCM IMA Duck DK4, s ADPCM IMA Electronic Arts EACS, d ADPCM IMA Electronic Arts SEAD, ADPCM IMA Funcom ISS, ADPCM IMA QuickTime, ADPCM IMA Loki SDL MJPEG, ADPCM IMA WAV, ADPCM IMA Westwood, ADPCM Microsoft, ADPCM Sound Blaster Pro 2-bit, ADPCM Sound Blaster Pro 2.6-bit, ADPCM Sound Blaster Pro 4-bit, ADPCM Shockwave Flash, ADPCM Nintendo Gamecube THP, ADPCM CDROM XA, ADPCM Yamaha, ALAC (Apple Lossless Audio Codec), MPEG-4 Audio Lossless Coding (ALS), Adaptive Multi-Rate NarrowBand, Adaptive Multi-Rate WideBand, AMV Video, Deluxe Paint Animation, ASCII/ANSI art, Monkey’s Audio, Advanced SubStation Alpha subtitle, ASUS V1, ASUS V2, Atrac 1 (Adaptive TRansform Acoustic Coding), Atrac 3 (Adaptive TRansform Acoustic Coding 3), Auravision AURA, Auravision Aura 2, AVS (Audio Video Standard) video, Bethesda VID video, Brute Force & Ignorance, Bink Audio (DCT), Bink Audio (RDFT), Bink video, BMP image, Interplay C93, CamStudio, TechSmith Screen Capture Codec, Chinese AVS video (AVS1-P2, JiZhun profile), CD Graphics video, Cinepak, Cirrus Logic AccuPak, COOK, Creative YUV (CYUV), , Chronomaster DFA, VC3/DNxHD, DPX image, Delphine Software International CIN audio, Delphine Software International CIN video, DVB subtitles, DVD subtitles, DV (Digital Video), Feeble Files/ScummVM DXA, ATSC A/52 E-AC-3, Electronic Arts CMV video, Electronic Arts Madcow Video, Electronic Arts TGQ video, Electronic Arts TGV video, Electronic Arts TQI Video, Escape 124, FFmpeg video codec #1, Huffyuv FFmpeg variant, FLAC (Free Lossless Audio Codec), Flash Screen Video, Flash Screen Video Version 2, Autodesk Animator Flic video, Flash Video (FLV) / Sorenson Spark / Sorenson H.263, Fraps, Forward Uncompressed, G.722 ADPCM, G.726 ADPCM, GIF (Graphics Interchange Format), GSM, GSM Microsoft variant, H.261, H.263 / H.263-1996, Intel H.263, H.263+ / H.263-1998 / H.263 version 2, H.264 / AVC / MPEG-4 AVC / MPEG-4 part 10, Huffyuv / HuffYUV, id Quake II CIN video, IFF ByteRun1, IFF ILBM, IMC (Intel Music Coder), Intel Indeo 2, Intel Indeo 3, Intel Indeo Video Interactive 5, DPCM Interplay, Interplay MVE video, , JPEG-LS, Bitmap Brothers JV video, Kega Game Video, Karl Morton’s video codec, Lagarith lossless, libx264 H.264 / AVC / MPEG-4 AVC / MPEG-4 part 10, Lossless JPEG, LOCO, MACE (Macintosh Audio Compression/Expansion) 3:1, MACE (Macintosh Audio Compression/Expansion) 6:1, Sony PlayStation MDEC (Motion DECoder), Mimic, MJPEG (Motion JPEG), Apple MJPEG-B, MLP (Meridian Lossless Packing), American Laser Games MM Video, Motion Pixels video, MP1 (MPEG audio layer 1), MP1 (MPEG audio layer 1), MP2 (MPEG audio layer 2), MP2 (MPEG audio layer 2), MP3 (MPEG audio layer 3), ADU (Application Data Unit) MP3 (MPEG audio layer 3), ADU (Application Data Unit) MP3 (MPEG audio layer 3), MP3 (MPEG audio layer 3), MP3onMP4, MP3onMP4, Musepack SV7, Musepack SV8, MPEG-1 video, MPEG-2 video, MPEG-4 part 2, MPEG-1 video, MPEG-1/2 video XvMC (X-Video Motion Compensation), MPEG-4 part 2 Microsoft variant version 3, MPEG-4 part 2 Microsoft variant version 1, MPEG-4 part 2 Microsoft variant version 2, Microsoft RLE, Microsoft Video-1, LCL (LossLess Codec Library) MSZH, Mobotix MxPEG video, Nellymoser Asao, NuppelVideo/RTJPEG, PAM (Portable AnyMap) image, PBM (Portable BitMap) image, PCM A-law, PCM signed 16|20|24-bit big-endian for Blu-ray media, PCM signed 20|24-bit big-endian, PCM 32-bit floating point big-endian, PCM 32-bit floating point little-endian, PCM 64-bit floating point big-endian, PCM 64-bit floating point little-endian, PCM signed 20-bit little-endian planar, PCM mu-law, PCM signed 16-bit big-endian, PCM signed 16-bit little-endian, PCM 16-bit little-endian planar, PCM signed 24-bit big-endian, PCM D-Cinema audio signed 24-bit, PCM signed 24-bit little-endian, PCM signed 32-bit big-endian, PCM signed 32-bit little-endian, PCM signed 8-bit, PCM unsigned 16-bit big-endian, PCM unsigned 16-bit little-endian, PCM unsigned 24-bit big-endian, PCM unsigned 24-bit little-endian, PCM unsigned 32-bit big-endian, PCM unsigned 32-bit little-endian, PCM unsigned 8-bit, PCM Zork, PC Paintbrush PCX image, PGM (Portable GrayMap) image, PGMYUV (Portable GrayMap YUV) image, HDMV Presentation Graphic Stream subtitles, Pictor/PC Paint, PNG image, PPM (Portable PixelMap) image, V.Flash PTX image, QCELP / PureVoice, QDesign Music Codec 2, Apple QuickDraw, Q-team QPEG, QuickTime Animation (RLE) video, AJA Kona 10-bit RGB Codec, Uncompressed RGB 10-bit, raw video, RealAudio 1.0 (14.4K) encoder, RealAudio 2.0 (28.8K), RL2 video, id RoQ DPCM, id RoQ video, QuickTime video (RPZA), RealVideo 1.0, RealVideo 2.0, RealVideo 3.0, RealVideo 4.0, SMPTE 302M, SGI image, Shorten, RealAudio SIPR / ACELP.NET, Smacker audio, Smacker video, QuickTime Graphics (SMC), Snow, DPCM Sol, Sonic, Sonic lossless, Sunplus JPEG (SP5X), SubRip subtitle, Sun Rasterfile image, Sorenson Vector Quantizer 1 / Sorenson Video 1 / SVQ1, Sorenson Vector Quantizer 3 / Sorenson Video 3 / SVQ3, Truevision Targa image, Theora, Nintendo Gamecube THP video, Tiertex Limited SEQ video, TIFF image, 8088flex TMV, TrueHD, Duck TrueMotion 1.0, Duck TrueMotion 2.0, DSP Group TrueSpeech, True Audio (TTA), VQF TwinVQ, Renderware TXD (TeXture Dictionary) image, IBM UltiMotion, Uncompressed 4:2:2 10-bit, Uncompressed 4:2:2 10-bit, Beam Software VB, SMPTE VC-1, ATI VCR1, Sierra VMD audio, Sierra VMD video, VMware Screen Codec / VMware Video, Vorbis, On2 VP3, On2 VP5, On2 VP6, On2 VP6 (Flash version, with alpha channel), On2 VP6 (Flash version), On2 VP8, Westwood Studios VQA (Vector Quantized Animation) video, WavPack, Windows Media Audio 9 Professional, Windows Media Audio 1, Windows Media Audio 2, Windows Media Audio Voice, Windows Media Video 7, Windows Media Video 8, Windows Media Video 9, Winnov WNV1, Westwood Audio (SND1), DPCM Xan, Wing Commander III / Xan, Wing Commander IV / Xxan, Miro VideoXL, DivX subtitles (XSUB), Psygnosis YOP Video, LCL (LossLess Codec Library) ZLIB, Zip Motion Blocks Video


‘What Was There’ project adds a pinch of history to augmented reality

So, it works as such. You dig up ancient photos — a few generations prior, or even a few decades ago — scan ’em in, and tag them to their rightful place on Google Maps. Then, folks who visit the ‘What Was Here’ project website or download the iOS app (all linked below) will be able to see what kind of world they’d be living in if Uncle Rico’s time machine actually worked. ‘Course, the initiative needs you, you and you to participate if it’s to be dubbed a success, so we’d recommend using whatever’s left of your weekend to contribute. And then send your mum a “thinking of you” letter using the very map you’re improving. Who said retro had to be retro, anyway?

‘What Was There’ project adds a pinch of history to augmented reality originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 18 Sep 2011 16:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Gizmodo  |  sourceWhat Was There, iTunes  | Email this | Comments

Samsung countersues Apple in Australia, claims iPhone / iPad 2 violate its patents

Man. Exciting stuff, here. Stuff like lawyers yelling at each other in varied continents because “your stuff looks too much like my theoretical stuff.” The long, winding and increasingly mind-numbing battle between Samsung and Apple has taken yet another turn in Australia, with the former slapping the latter with a bold countersuit. According to The Wall Street Journal, Sammy feels that the iPhone and iPad 2 both “violate a number of wireless technology patents held by Samsung.” Spokesman Nam Ki-yung stated the following: “To defend our intellectual property, Samsung filed a cross claim for Apple’s violation of Samsung’s wireless technology patents.” The suit is being filed just days / weeks before a ruling will decide on whether the Galaxy Tab 10.1 can be legally sold Down Under, and in related news, Samsung is also appealing a recent ruling back in Germany. If ever the world needed an out-of-court settlement…

Samsung countersues Apple in Australia, claims iPhone / iPad 2 violate its patents originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 18 Sep 2011 13:54:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceThe Wall Street Journal  | Email this | Comments