Showing posts with label Explains. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Explains. Show all posts

Saturday, September 17, 2011

What's Trending Explains How They Accidentally Killed Steve Jobs [Video]

What's Trending Explains How They Accidentally Killed Steve Jobs Last Friday, What's Trending tweeted—erroneously—that Steve Jobs had passed away. Which sent the internet into a frenzy! The tweet was deleted minutes after it was published. But how did it get out there in the first place?

Disrupt Group (which run What's Trending) co-founder Shira Lazar appeared at the top of today's What's Trending show and issued an apology and explained what happened. Sort of. According to Shira, a junior staffer sent the unconfirmed tweet and that the tweet was retracted within a minute. Shira went on to say, "who did it or how it happened no longer matters" calling the incident a "terrible and unfortunate one."

Shira apologized to Steve Jobs, his family, friends, and to their former partner CBS News. Shira promised that What's Trending would follow the highest standards in journalism with verified and substantiated news.

That probably starts with no more junior staffers with itchy trigger fingers manning the Twitter feed.

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Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Why Are All the Cellphone Companies Suing Each Other? [Giz Explains]

Why Are All the Cellphone Companies Suing Each Other?Apple is suing Motorola, Samsung and HTC; they're all suing Apple back. RIM and Kodak are suing each other. Kodak is suing Apple. Sony is suing LG. Microsoft is suing FoxConn and Barnes and Noble. Oracle is suing Google.

Nokia and Apple have already settled a suit.

And since Google now owns Motorola (pending regulatory approval) it is very much an interested party in case of Microsoft vs. Motorola, which landed in the US International Trade Court yesterday WHAT THE HELL IS GOING ON HERE?

Nobody in the mobile industry sweated patents until after the fact. The philosophy has largely been to go for it in terms of building products, and let legal catch up. Engineers developed, and worried about intellectual property rights later. Meanwhile individual companies filed for patents, and snapped up smaller firms that owned patents. It meant there were lots of competing claims for similar technologies. And then the lawsuits began—They started in earnest in 2009, accelerated last year, and are really starting to come to blows now.

There's no other way to tell who has the valid claim. Each company is stocking up on patent portfolios, trying to shield itself and have a bludgeon to use against others. Google bought Motorola largely for 18 key patents, but scored thousands more in the bargain. When you have two (or two hundred) patents that ostensibly cover the same technology, the only way to settle it is to hand it over to a judge.

The real answer, ultimately is that they're suing each other because the patent system is broken.

Tens of billions of dollars in the form of licenses and future sales. Successful patent enforcement can let one company totally freeze another out of a market. Apple won a preliminary ruling against HTC that would keep the latter from selling its phones in the United States. And Apple was able to use a patent injunction to make Samsung stop selling the Galaxy Tab in Germany.

That's the theory, anyway. In reality the winners will likely let the losers pay exorbitant licensing fees and then collect for years and years to come.

There's also the barrier factor. If a company can successfully enforce a patent, say for a particular antenna design, and doesn't license it, it means everyone else has to come up with a new design. That takes time, costs a ton of money, and lets the patent holder have a market to itself.

Why is it exploding all the sudden?

Short answer: because there's a lot of money on the table that isn't spoken for yet.

Smartphones are finally taking off. The market is expected to grow by about 50 percent globally in 2011. The tablet market is growing even faster; it's expected to grow 300 percent this year. And yet, globally, hardly anyone has a smartphone and far, far fewer people have tablets. That's going to change (at least the former) over the next decade. Companies want to lock in rights now and collect on all those future phones for sale.

What will it mean for consumers?

It means that your prices will go up. But not by much. Let's say Google has to pay a 1-cent licensing fee to, say, Samsung for every Android phone sold in 2012. That's a lot of money in total, but the price passed along to the individual consumer isn't great.

Where it will cost you, however, is in having a better phone. Money spent on licenses and legal fees is money not spent on making better products.

You can keep up with Mat Honan, the author of this post, on Twitter, Facebook, or Google+. Related Stories

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