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Unhappy with the jury’s decision, ARM wants a retrial with Qualcomm as it believes that the Nuvia license was breached
Despite Qualcomm gaining a victory against ARM in the latest trial, the battle is far from over as chances of an appeal look extremely high
The jury delivered a win for Qualcomm with a split verdict.
Judge Maryellen Noreika, who presided over the case in U.S. federal court in Delaware, encouraged Arm and Qualcomm to mediate their dispute.
(Bloomberg) -- Qualcomm Inc. prevailed at trial against Arm Holdings Plc’s claim that it breached a license for chip technology that the world’s largest maker of mobile-phone processors acquired when it bought a startup in 2021. Most Read from BloombergNew York City’s Historic Preservation Movement Is Having a Midlife CrisisThe Architects Who Built MiamiReviving a Little-Known Modernist Landmark in BuffaloNYPD Car Chases Are Becoming More Frequent — and More DangerousDakar’s Air Quality Plummets
Qualcomm Inc. prevailed at trial in a licensing fight with Arm Holdings Plc over computer-chip technology that the world’s largest maker of mobile-phone processors acquired when it bought a startup in 2021.
Arm's lawsuit against Qualcomm asks for the destruction of chip designs it acquired from Nuvia for $1.4 billion in 2021. Nuvia's technology has become the basis of Qualcomm's push into the personal computer market.
Geekom has introduced world's first mini-PC based on the Qualcomm's processor along with Strix Point and Core Ultra 200H-based mini PCs.
The Chief Executive of Qualcomm admitted to a jury that the company acquired Nuvia to save itself as much as $1.4 billion in yearly payments to ARM
Qualcomm (QCOM) closed the most recent trading day at $150.40, moving -1.73% from the previous trading session.
Lawyers for Arm Holdings and Qualcomm are set to make closing arguments on Friday in a case that could upend Qualcomm's push into the PC market with a chip meant to rival Apple and Intel on speed. An eight-person jury in a U.S. federal court in Delaware will determine whether Qualcomm or Nuvia, a startup Qualcomm purchased for $1.4 billion in 2021, breached a license agreement with U.K.-based Arm, which supplies intellectual property to both firms. If Arm is victorious, the British firm could force Qualcomm to destroy the technology it purchased from Nuvia, which has become the basis of a chip released this year that Microsoft and the entire Windows PC industry had hoped would claw back market share lost to Apple.
In the ongoing Qualcomm and ARM trial, the chipset maker’s executive said that the custom Oryon cores feature less than 1 percent of the chip designer’s technologies
Qualcomm Inc.’s chief executive officer told a jury that its business suffered when customers were misled by computer-chip designer Arm Holdings Plc about the companies’ licensing agreement for chip technology vital to the electronics ecosystem.
Internal Qualcomm documents showed the chip firm estimated it could eventually save as much as $1.4 billion a year on payments to Arm by purchasing a little-known startup in 2021, according to evidence shown at a trial on Wednesday. The projection surfaced while Qualcomm CEO Cristiano Amon was testifying to a jury in Delaware federal court about his firm's rationale for purchasing Nuvia for $1.4 billion in 2021. The chip firm's CEO was testifying as part of a trial to resolve claims that Arm can force Qualcomm to destroy the technology it acquired because Arm never consented to the transfer of Nuvia's license agreements.
At issue: Arm SoC designs that Qualcomm acquired when it bought Nuvia in 2021.
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Attorneys for Arm and Qualcomm grilled a former Apple executive on Tuesday about a key question for the future of the chip industry: Who owns the intellectual property built on top of Arm's computing architecture? At stake in a trial in U.S. federal court in Delaware this week is the fate of Qualcomm's push into the laptop business, where it is helping partners such as Microsoft try to regain ground that Windows computers lost to Apple after the iPhone maker introduced its own custom chips. Arm's flagship product is a computing architecture that competes against Intel's architecture and is ubiquitous in smartphones and increasingly used in laptops and data centers.
On the first day of the trial, Arm CEO rebuffed Qualcomm’s allegations that the company had considered designing its own chips.
Qualcomm has reportedly placed "advanced packaging" orders at UMC, taking the first step towards challenging TSMC's dominance.
Arm Holdings Plc’s legal dispute with Qualcomm Inc. is being argued before a federal jury in Delaware this week, pitting two of the world’s most influential chipmakers against each other in an intellectual property case that threatens to roil the technology industry.
(Bloomberg) -- Arm Holdings Plc’s legal dispute with Qualcomm Inc. is being argued before a federal jury in Delaware this week, pitting two of the world’s most influential chipmakers against each other in an intellectual property case that threatens to roil the technology industry.Most Read from BloombergHong Kong's Expat Party Hub Reshaped by Chinese InfluxHow California Sees the World, and ItselfLondon’s Tube Fares Are Set to Rise by 4.6% Next YearAmerican Institute of Architects CEO ResignsQu
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