Most Popular in Apple
-
A fix for those "Pairing Record Missing" errors
-
Blog sale!
-
You're the Pundit: Does a 7" iPad make sense for the education market?
-
Anonymous Hacks Syrian President?s Email. The Password: 12345
-
Backdoor in TRENDnet IP Cameras Provide Real-Time Peeping Tom Paradise?
-
Adobe confirms: no Flash for Chrome on Android
-
Twelve South HoverBar a unique way to marry iPad and iMac
-
White MacBook reaches end of life, education sales to cease
-
The Most Prolific Hacker on the Internet: A One-Handed Shadow
-
O2 network issues hinder iPhone users
HTC lawsuit came after warning by Apple to handset makers
Apple COO Tim Cook's warning from early 2009 wasn't the only one that handset makers received before Apple sicced the lawyers on HTC last week. According to a research note from Oppenheimer analyst Yal Reiner, Apple began warning top executives at companies such as HTC and Motorola in January that it wasn't too happy about seeing allegedly iPhone-related IP showing up in proposed new products.
According to "industry checks," Cook's comments last January during the quarterly analyst call—that Apple "will not stand for having our IP ripped off, and we'll use whatever weapons that we have at our disposal"—were taken seriously by the likes of LG, Samsung, and even Nokia. Though the Palm Pre openly flaunted multitouch capabilities (what most handset makers believed were at the heart of Cook's warning), its sales numbers haven't proven to be much of a concern for Apple so far.
Read the comments on this post
More Stories in Arstechnica Apple News
- Ding dong, the white MacBook is dead—for real this time
- Paul McCartney concert stream will test the waters on live Apple TV viewership
- Apple hoping to secure standardized royalties for 3G wireless patents
- TuneCore: first iTunes Match royalties are "magic money" out of "thin air"
- Etc: Good news 2010 MacBook Air, MacBook Pro, and iMac owners: you can now use Lion Internet Recovery thanks to a new EFI Firmware update.
- Apple trademark may hint at processing improvement for next-gen A6 processor
- Etc: Buffalo Wild Wings, a favorite locale of Ars staffers, is expanding a trial that lets users order from an iPad. BW3 claims the goal isn't to replace waiters, but to free them up to "interact more" with customers.
- Etc: Apple has posted a friendly warning to developers to avoid manipulating App Store rankings, either themselves or via third-party services.
- High-res UI elements in OS X 10.7.3 renew buzz about "retina" display MacBooks
- Apple rules top three smartphone spots but loses new users to Android
Most Popular Stories
A fix for those "Pairing Record Missing" errors
Blog sale!
You're the Pundit: Does a 7" iPad make sense for the education market?
Anonymous Hacks Syrian President?s Email. The Password: 12345
HMC Commands
Backdoor in TRENDnet IP Cameras Provide Real-Time Peeping Tom Paradise?
Server error: 501 #5.1.3 in UNIX
Adobe confirms: no Flash for Chrome on Android
Replace pipe with Broken Pipe
Twelve South HoverBar a unique way to marry iPad and iMac
