Posts Tagged ‘qualcomm’
South Korea: Qualcomm has been fined for anti-competitive practices in supplying chips for CDMA handsets
The 260bn won (£127m) fine — the largest-ever levied by the KFTC — was imposed on Qualcomm for anti-competitive practices. These include providing discounts and rebates to South Korean mobile-phone manufacturers that mainly use Qualcomm chips in their handsets. The fine was accompanied by an order to stop the practices in question, which are seen as harming smaller, rival chipset manufacturers.
Qualcomm said in a statement on Thursday that it “firmly disagrees with the KFTC decision that certain discounts and rebates it provides to its Korean customers on the purchase of its CDMA chipsets are in violation of Korean competition law”. The chipset maker said it will file an appeal against the fine.
The US company also called the fine “excessive and unwarranted”, and said there was no indication of how the KFTC arrived at the figure of 260bn won.
South Korea is home to some of the world’s largest handset manufacturers, notably Samsung and LG. In its statement, Qualcomm said it was “very proud of the long-standing, mutually beneficial relationships [Qualcomm has] enjoyed with the Korean wireless industry [and] the discounts and rebates which have been characterised as violating competition law were put in place for the benefit of Korean handset manufacturers”.
Qualcomm has had several other run-ins with antitrust regulators around the world. The European Commission began an investigation into its practices in 2007, but that probe ended last year when Nokia, the chief complainant, settled with Qualcomm.
Mobile Handsets: Nokia denies utterly rumours it will make an Android-based device
The report, carried in The Guardian, took a cue from “industry insiders” to predict the launch of a touch-screen Android device at Nokia World in September. When contacted by ZDNet UK later Monday morning, a Nokia representative issued an “outright denial” of the piece.
“There is no truth to this story whatsoever,” a statement from the company read. “It is a well-known fact that Symbian is our platform of choice for smartphones.”
Going for Android would certainly have been a surprising move for Nokia, given the time and money it has put into opening up Symbian. Nokia’s operating system (since it bought out Symbian’s other stakeholders last year) is likely to reappear in its new, open-source guise next year.
Nokia also has another open-source mobile platform in Maemo, which it is actively promoting as part of its Intel partnership.
Meanwhile, fairly realistic-looking images have been leaked of Sony Ericsson’s Android phone, currently code-named “Rachael.” The device appears to be part of SE’s high-end Xperia line and is said to run on Qualcomm’s 1GHz Snapdragon processor.
Adobe frees mobile flash: It’s about time
–The next version of the mobile Flash runtime will be free of license fees. Adobe also confirmed that the mobile version of the Air runtime will be free.
–Adobe changed its licensing terms and released additional technical information that will make it easier for companies to create their own Flash-compatible products.
–The company announced a new consortium called Open Screen supporting the more open versions of Flash and Air. Members of the new group include the five leading handset companies, three mobile operators (including NTT DoCoMo and Verizon), technology vendors (including Intel, Cisco, and Qualcomm), and content companies (BBC, MTV, and NBC Universal). Google, Apple, and Microsoft are not members. It’s not clear to me what the consortium members have actually agreed to do. My guess is it’s mostly a political group.
Adobe said that the idea behind the announcements is to create a single consistent platform that lets developers create an application or piece of content once and run it across various types of devices and operating systems. That idea is very appealing to developers and content companies today. It was equally appealing two years ago, when then-CEO of Adobe Bruce Chizen made the exact same promise (link):
If we execute appropriately we will be the engagement platform, or the layer, on top of anything that has an LCD display, any computing device — everything from a refrigerator to an automobile to a video game to a computer to a mobile phone.
If Adobe had made the Open Screen announcement two years ago, I think it could have caught Microsoft completely flat-footed, and Adobe might have been in a very powerful position by now. But by waiting two years, Adobe gave Microsoft advance warning and plenty of runway room to react — so much so that ArsTechnica today called Adobe’s announcement a reaction to Microsoft Silverlight (link).
Also, the most important changes appear to apply to the next version of mobile Flash and the upcoming mobile version of Air — meaning this was in part a vaporware announcement. Even when the new runtime software ships, it will take a long time to get it integrated into mobile phones. So once again, Microsoft has a long runway to maneuver on.
Still, the changes Adobe made are very useful. There’s no way Flash could have become ubiquitous in the mobile world while Adobe was still charging fees for it. The changes to the Flash license terms remove one of the biggest objections I’ve seen to Flash from open source advocates (link). The Flash community seems excited (link, link). And the list of supporters is impressive. Looking through the obligatory quotes attached to the Adobe release, two things stand out:
–Adobe got direct mentions of Air from ARM, Intel, SonyEricsson, Verizon, and Nokia (although Nokia promised only to explore Air, while it’s on the record promising to bundle Silverlight mobile).
–The inclusion of NBC Universal in the announcement will have Adobe people chuckling because Microsoft signed up NBC to stream the Olympics online using Silverlight. So NBC is warning Microsoft not to take it for granted, and Adobe gets to stick its tongue out.
What does it all mean?
Nothing much in the short term. As I mentioned earlier, this is mostly a vaporware announcement (other than the license changes). Some people are speculating that this will put pressure on Apple to make Flash available on the iPhone (link). That’s possible, if Apple’s real concern was that they didn’t like Flash Lite. Now they can port full Flash, or someone else can do it. But if Apple is in reality unwilling to let anyone else’s platform run on the iPhone then we’ll see other objections to Flash emerge.
The marketing competition to control the future of web apps is continuing to heat up. Microsoft is trying to take the whole thing proprietary by creating a comprehensive architecture, Adobe is trying to drive its own platform, Sun is trying to re-energize Java, Google is making its own moves, and so on (link). Plus, of course, most web app developers today are happy with what they’re using now and have little interest in switching to any of the new architectures (check out the dandy commentary by Joel Spolsky here).
It’s an enormously complex situation, and it’s going to take months, if not years, before we can start to see who’s winning and who is losing. Rubicon is working on a white paper that will try to clarify the situation a bit. I’ll let you know when it’s published.
In the meantime, enjoy the marketing fireworks. The intense competition is forcing companies to innovate faster and open up their products, as Adobe did today. I think that process is good for just about everyone in the industry.
Copyright 2008 Michael Mace.
No need to worry with Treo Pro

If you want a crackerjack smartphone it follows that you?ll hold in high regard this ultramodern Treo Pro smartphone by Palm. In a nutshell, Treo pro offers a wealth of quirks to its lucky owners like its GPS, Wi-Fi, and the unfailing Microsoft Mobile 6.1 Professional Edition OS.
Plus, it?s also boasting a 400MHZ Qualcomm processor, HSDPA/UMTS/EDGE/GPRS/GSM network supports and a 320×320 transflective color TFT flush touchscreen.
Ultimately, the Treo Pro brags a 2 megapixel camera, microUSB 2.0 connector and an expandable microSDHC card slot up to 32GB of digital storage space.
HTC to Release a Sprint Diamond in Red

Sprint in combined efforts with HTC (High Tech Corporation) make ready a Sprint Diamond in red for its highly regarded clientele. And as usual, the eye-catching mobile phone sports an EVDO rev A, WiFi and Bluetooth 2.0 connections. Plus, it?s also crowing a 640×480 touch screen, Qualcomm MSM 7510A Processor, 4GB internal memory, Opera 9.5 Browser and a 3.2 megapixel camera at your disposal.

