HTC Falls After Apple Sues to Block Imports of Phones
HTC Falls after Apple Sues to Block Imports of Phones (Update1)
March 3 (Bloomberg) — HTC Corp. fell the most in threeweeks in Taipei trading after Apple inc. filed a patent-infringement complaint seeking to stop imports of the company’shandsets running Google inc.’s Android software into the U.S.
HTC dropped 2 percent to close at NT$323.5 on the TaiwanStock Exchange, the biggest decline since Feb. 8. the benchmarkTaiex index gained 0.4 percent.
Apple said yesterday it filed the complaint with the U.S.International Trade Commission in Washington, claiminginfringement of 10 patents related to the implementation ofoperating systems. the complaint highlights intensifying rivalrybetween the maker of the iPhone and Google, whose Android phonesincreasingly challenge Apple’s $13 billion smartphone business.
“It’s a very good timing for Apple, as HTC’s new Androidphones about to launch are already receiving good reviews andorders from European operators,” said Lu Chia-lin, a Taipei-based analyst at Macquarie Group Ltd. who rates HTC“outperform.” “Operators are trying really hard to findalternative products to the iPhone.”
In a lawsuit filed in federal court in Wilmington, Delaware,Cupertino, California-based Apple claims infringement of 10other patents, including one for technology that lets peoplework the phone by touching the screen with their fingers.
Android models helped bolster HTC’s market share last year,making it the fourth-most popular brand for the devices afterNokia Oyj, Research in Motion Ltd. and Apple, according tomarket researcher Gartner inc.
Google Backs HTC
Taoyuan, Taiwan-based HTC declined to comment on thecomplaint, saying it needed time to examine the filings, LindaMills, a company spokeswoman, wrote in an e-mailed statement.
Google, owner of the most-popular Internet search engine,says it isn’t a party in either case. “However, we stand behindour Android operating system and the partners who have helped usto develop it,” the Mountain View, California-based companysaid.
HTC is the biggest maker of handsets using MicrosoftCorp.’s Windows and was the first to offer a handset based onthe Android operating system, releasing the G1 through DeutscheTelekom AG’s T-Mobile USA wireless unit. the company alsomanufactures Google’s first phone, the Nexus one.
HTC increased its share of global smartphone sales to 6.9percent last year, from 6 percent in 2008, Gartner said. Apple,in third place, expanded its share to 16 percent from 11 percent.
Apple also is embroiled in a patent dispute with Nokia, theworld’s largest maker of all types of mobile phones. Each hasaccused the other of infringing patents, and the ITC isinvestigating complaints that could result in import bans.
Steve Jobs, Apple’s Chief Executive Officer, in Januaryproclaimed the company to be the world’s biggest mobile devicemaker by revenue. IPhones, iPods and laptops made up most ofApple’s $15.7 billion in sales during the fiscal first quarterthat ended on Dec. 26, 2009, Jobs said at the time.
The conflict between Apple and Google is escalating as thetwo companies vie to control how people access the Internet whenon the move. Google is looking to smartphones to boost itsadvertising revenue, while Apple aims to position the iPhone,iPod and iPad devices as the platform of choice for movies,music, books and mobile Internet.
Previously Close Relationship
The previously close relationship saw the two companiescollaborate on map, search and mail functions for the iPhonebefore its release in July 2007. Google also made its YouTubevideo service compatible with Apple’s QuickTime player to makeit accessible on the device.
Google’s announcement of its Android operating system forsmartphones in November 2007 has put it in direct competitionwith Apple. the company in January began selling Nexus one, itsmost explicit challenge to the iPhone to date.
Android devices accounted for 12.4 percent of mobile Webbrowsing in North America in December, according to QuantcastCorp., a San Francisco-based research firm that measures databased on Web-publishing software. That compared with 65 percentfor the iPhone and 8.7 percent for Research in Motion Ltd.’sBlackBerry. Android surpassed the BlackBerry in November for thefirst time.
Bing Replacing Google?
Apple may counter by replacing Google as the default searchengine on the iPhone, a deal rumored to be worth $100 million toGoogle. two people familiar with the matter in January saidApple is in talks with Microsoft to use its Bing search engineand is also working on ways to manage ads displayed on itsmobile devices, in a move to challenge Google’s advertisingbusiness.
In November, Google announced plans to pay $750 million forAdMob inc., a mobile-phone advertising startup backed by SequoiaCapital, one of Google’s original investors. in January, Applesaid it bought Quattro Wireless, an AdMob rival.
The increasing rivalry led Google’s Chief Executive OfficerEric Schmidt to step down from Apple’s board in July afterserving for three years.
Apple’s litigation against HTC is “a warning shot”against its smartphone rivals,” said Alen Lin, a Taipei-basedanalyst at BNP Paribas SA. “The iPhone is still dominant in thesmartphone space.”
To contact the reporter on this story:Pavel Alpeyev in Tokyo at palpeyev@bloomberg.net;Weiyi Lim at wlim26@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: March 3, 2010 02:22 EST
HTC Falls After Apple Sues to Block Imports of Phones
Related Websites
- AT&T Has Removed Google Search In Favor Of Yahoo | Android Community
- Dirty Details: Apple Lawsuit Attacks Android | Android Phone Fans
- Webcast, Bloomberg, CNN Covering Conference on Financial Reform, 3/3 « naked capitalism
- Chia aspires to be 1st Malaysian to win at home in Maybank Open | 30mg.com – Get Your Daily Dose Of Sports
- Barely Bake Chia Oaties « hungry hungry hippie
- CNN – Breaking News Chia Obama! | Most Searched News
- Senior Product Marketing Manager* Job in Cupertino, California US
| Find Business Development Jobs - 2010 – iTunes Store Tops 10 Billion Songs Sold CUPERTINO, California—February 25, 2010—Apple | Rock History
- Google Backs Its Boy, HTC, In The Apple Lawsuit Ring
- Kodak, RIM file International Trade Commission complaint against Apple re: image preview patents
Categories: Technology Tags: Apple, chia, iPhone, macquarie group, wilmington delaware
dot.Maggie
I am still hearing this ‘I am buying it so I can surf the net, instantly turns on, Multimedia player’
1) Surf the net without Flash, may as well just read PHP without it. no MULTI-TASKING, so no surfing and talking to a friend via Skype. NO MULTI-TASKING!!
2) Right so instant on computing, well My PC turns on from cold boot to desktop (not from Hibernation) in around 30 seconds, just enough time to find the coffee and light a fag.
3) Multi-Media, ‘MULTI!!’ Media, Have not laughed so hard sober in years. no USB, no Firewire, no USB2, no eSATA, no MULTI TASKING equals NO MULTI MEDIA.
Come on Apple this is a joke they just set it running before April 1st. honestly if you buy one of these you are fooling yourself and your hard earned cash into something that will end up in the recycle yard before the year is up.
I am not an APPLE hater, I hate badly thought out ideas and bad corporate business practice. both of which as very much evident in the iPad and Apple in general. I can understand that the fanboy’s don’t what to own up to it, they are like the weak children in school who need to believe that Apple is their friend and will look after their health and well being. Wake up people this is a less than useless device that you will fall for just because your BIG (pocket picking) buddy has told you to buy.
Honestly buy a product that works, and offers variety, choice and value for money. iPad is but the ‘Emperor’s New Clothes’.
iPad has no USB, NO MULTI TASKING, no Flash compliance, no GPS, NO Camera/s, limits the MP3/4 codecs, NO MULTI TASKING, no Ram/Harddrive expansion, no Keyboard/mouse port, no IR Port, no non-proprietary software, no external or swappable battery, NO MULTI TASKING!!!, cannot make calls, NON OF MY MONEY!!
iPad has a touch screen, um! right okay that’s it. So right if you need a touch screen thing that has very limited capabilities then it’s right for you. go get you iPad Fanboys Steve Jobs ‘Needs your Money’.
Oh! by the way has anyone seen what happens to screen that you use a finger/s on? Scratches, sticky finger prints, nice shiny screen outside (I know most Fanboys don’t see daylight, but I promise there is such a thing), read your books, surf the pictureless net, enjoy the iPad before you are put in one, a soft iPadded room.
What next the iCoffin? Apple you make me laugh. Real tech please not just designer junk.
Categories: Technology Tags: 28 jan, Apple, business practice, corporate business, earned cash, multi media
Article: Editorial: The Evolution of Apple Media Players Into Tablet Computers
Though some people may think of their iPods—particularly iPod touches—as miniature computers, it’s well established that they weren’t originally designed for this purpose; the first iPods couldn’t create anything at all. They started out as music players, triple underscoring the word “players,” and Apple spent years reluctant to let them expand much past that initial concept. In fact, though the iPod was introduced in 2001, the Apple-drawn line between iPods and computers only began to dissolve two years ago with the release of the iPhone and its Mac-derived iPhone OS. So as the company prepares to announce its new tablet, a device that will radically expand the user’s ability to create content within an iPhone OS environment, it’s worth briefly looking back at some history to provide a context for its upcoming new product revelations.
1. It Started with Newton. After a five-year run, Apple killed the Newton platform, an influential but only modestly successful early 1990’s predecessor to the iPhone OS that ran on a number of Apple and third-party PDAs. Designed as input devices and primarily called MessagePads, Newton-based PDAs could translate handwriting into text, create Notes, contacts, and calendar information, and run third-party applications, eventually including web browsers. Their multimedia functionality was limited, in part because of their use of black and white screens, but they were praised as the forerunners of subsequent mobile computing devices from numerous companies. In 1998, Apple CEO Steve Jobs announced the discontinuation of Newton in a press release, calling it “consistent with our strategy to focus all of our software development resources on extending the Macintosh operating system,” and promising at the same time to serve the “mobile computing market” with Mac OS-based products beginning in 1999. as history showed, the only Mac OS “mobile computing” products released by Apple from 1999 to 2007 were Mac-branded notebooks; the company otherwise abandoned heldheld computers.
2. welcome to iPod. In 2001, Apple introduced the original iPod. by design, it created nothing on its own: it was, in essence, a slave to a computer with iTunes, given no leash to expand its content without a computer’s assistance. It was optimized for storing and playing music. for years, despite eventually adding color screens that could display photos and videos, iPods were primarily sold as music players with other features as bonuses.
3. Expansion Through Accessories. Subsequent iPods changed the playback-to-creation equation only a little, and then, largely due to accessories. Starting in 2003, Apple enabled certain iPods to store content created with microphone accessories, and for a time, digital pictures transferred from cameras via photo storage accessories. Years later, Apple permitted Nike + iPod accessories for the iPod nano to store running data recorded by a Sensor, and let this and other data be synchronized back to iTunes. But the company warned third-party developers not to go further in creating other types of hardware that wrote directly to the iPod’s database. Some developers ignored Apple and created accessories that literally subverted iTunes by writing music and video files directly to iPods from ripped CDs and DVDs. Apple blocked them, and repeatedly updated firmware and iTunes to stop the hacks.
4. Hacking and Early Apps. Starting in 2004, third-party accessory developers found ways to run their own mini apps—on-screen FM transmitter tuners, and so on—by taking over part of the screen during synchronization, a feature that Apple had never intended to be used this way. Apple blocked this in later iPods. other hackers replaced the iPod operating system with Linux and ran other applications, including a simple port of the PC game Doom; these hacks attracted some attention, but barely spread beyond the hardest-core iPod user community, and were thwarted by repeated hardware and software updates.
5. Tiny Input and Storage Changes. Apple made only minor changes to the “iPod as media player” formula before the late 2007 release of the original iPod touch. After adding built-in games to earlier iPods, it enabled fifth-generation iPods to similarly use the Click Wheel as a input device for downloadable games. It quietly enabled audiobooks, video files and games to store data as to where they’d last been played, even transferring some of this data back to iTunes. then, it added a simple search feature with an on-screen keyboard to newer Click Wheel iPods. None of these features really changed the “media player” concept, but they demonstrated that the devices could be used for more sophisticated input schemes and storage of data, though only in limited ways.
6. iPhone, Tearing Down the Wall. the iPhone and iPod touch were the first major watershed products to break down the “media player” barrier, transforming what Apple’s family of playback devices into pocket computers with input and on-device storage features, requiring greater synchronization with iTunes. Notably, the tension between the media player and computer features remained obvious for iPods as late as the end of 2007, when Apple was trying to decide whether the first-generation iPod touch should be capable of creating Calendar events, like the iPhone, or merely displaying them, like past iPods. the original iPod touch, as shipped, could only display events rather than creating them. There was no hardware impediment here; it was merely a question of whether Apple would allow the touch to run the same apps in the same way as the iPhone did. Its eventual decision to allow on-device editing, along with providing access to several apps previously reserved for the iPhone, helped to melt down the barrier entirely.
7. iPods as Media Creators. though Apple had enabled certain past iPods to record audio with expensive third-party accessories, 2008 saw the company add support for inexpensive microphones to Click Wheel and touchscreen iPods. It went further in 2009, adding a video camera to the iPod nano, and planned to do the same for the iPod touch until component problems intervened.
8. Keyboard. the next missing piece became a reliable text input device. iPhone and iPod touch users have long debated whether the on-screen keyboard was an effective enough tool for typing, with some saying yes and others strongly believing otherwise. It is widely assumed that a larger-screened iPhone OS device will have its own improved on-screen keyboard, but will it? And what solution, if any, will be offered for iPod touch and iPhone users who want a superior input scheme?
To add a keyboard accessory to the existing iPhone OS, a new piece of software—a HID or Human Interface Driver—would be needed, most properly from Apple. Only Apple could unify all keyboard-dependent apps around a single input standard, rather than leaving multiple third-party developers to struggle for widespread adoption, leaving dissatisfied consumers at the end. There’s another interesting issue, as well: the connector. would Apple use a 30-Pin Dock Connector for wired keyboards, or standard USB, instead? Or might it restrict keyboards to wireless connections only?
9. Stylus. though Apple CEO Steve Jobs pooh-poohed the idea of using a stylus with the iPhone and iPod touch, there’s little doubt that some users are expecting an improved version of the Newton’s handwriting recognition feature to appear in an Apple tablet device, and a pen-like implement would be needed for such an interface to work. Styluses have been released for the iPhone and iPod touch with relatively little interest from consumers, but an Apple-developed version would surely be smarter and more precise than the blunt, foam-tipped options that we’ve previously tested. Those willing to use their fingers to sketch Chinese characters already have a handwriting recognition solution in the iPhone and iPod touch, but there’s nothing for English and most other languages, and little sign that writing this way would be appealing to most users.
10. Connectivity as a Challenge. But will on-device creation be the extent of the tablet’s capabilities? Surely, a 10” multi-touch screen could itself be used as a keyboard, a touch surface, or a second video display for a computer. Some of this functionality could be achieved wirelessly, and USB ports might well suffice for some wired connections, but video would likely demand a new port—the Intel-Apple collaboration called Light Peak, or the earlier, less powerful Mini DisplayPort video standard. Whether Apple fully taps the capabilities of the tablet device as a computer peripheral, or leaves it to stand alone, remains to be seen; similarly, whether it enables the tablet to interface with televisions will also be a major, important question mark.
Given the history of Apple’s Mac, iPod, and iPhone devices, what do you think it will do with the tablet? will this device be primarily a media player, with expanded capabilities for books and magazines? a creative canvas for drawing and writing? Or something else? Share your expectations and hopes in the comments section below!
Next: iPhone Gems: Japanese Zen Titles iZen Garden 2 and Yoritsuki
Previous: Fifteen High-Profile 2010 CES iPod + iPhone Debuts Worth Seeing
Article: Editorial: The Evolution of Apple Media Players Into Tablet Computers
Categories: Technology Tags: Apple, initial concept
mp3playerzone.net Review
Hey everyone, we know it’s been a long time since our last post but we didn’t disappear on you. Foilball is here to stay! As you may know with everything going on in the world sometimes life gets in the way.
Hello fellow readers! We here at Foilball.com are dedicated to bringing you interesting information, news, and resources that will help you sleep easier at night.
We had an opportunity to talk to the guys who run mp3playerzone.net. They have put together a nice blog website that discusses what a lot of us love to read about; new technology that is actually useful and relevant to consumers. I do have to say that I enjoy reading about cutting edge technology products and mp3playerzone.net is a great place to learn about what is going on in the handheld device and accessories category.
Their Website Features:
· Mp3 Player Reviews and Blog
· New Devices Reviews
· Mp3 Player and Accessories Store
· Community Forum
Take a look at their site you will like what you see.

Categories: Technology Tags: Apple, iPod, mp3, mp3 review, mp3playerzone.net
Opening the iPod Classic – iPod Repair Guys – www.repairsharks.com
Hello, recently we had a chance to look at the insides of the Apple iPod Classic. Apparently it is one of the most difficult iPods to open. The iPod repair guys at Repair Sharks were kind enough to share and exclusive video on how to open the iPod Classic case.
Please do not try this at home unless you are experienced working with small devices, the electronics in the iPod are very delicate and can be damaged easily. In the case of the Classic it is extremely easy to damage the outer shell and back panel while trying to open the case.
The video is provided for information purposes only and Repair Sharks recommends letting a professional make any necessary repairs to your iPod.
For more information on iPod repair services including:
• Battery Replacement
• LCD Replacement
• Mainboard Replacement
• Headphone Jack Replacement
• Error Icons
Please visit the iPod Repair Guys website at: www.repairsharks.com. They offer free diagnostic services on many iPod versions.
Save money and time, let the iPod repair experts at Repair Sharks fix it. They offer high quality replacement parts and services at a fraction of the cost of Apple.
Categories: Technology Tags: Apple, Apple iPod Classic, How to open the iPod Classic, iPod, iPod Battery, iPod Classic Repair, iPod LCD, iPod Repair, iPod Repair Guy, iPod Repair Guys, iPod Video
