Motorola injunction against Apple push services upheld in Germany

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  • Reply 21 of 27
    quadra 610quadra 610 Posts: 6,757member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by I am a Zither Zather Zuzz View Post


    Apple has GOT to stop stealing IP from other companies. If they cannot innovate, they should pay the price and license it from them.



    It is unseemly that they steal from other companies. It is giving them a bad reputation.



    Apple's reputation seems pretty solid. Those blockbuster sales don't come from a bad rep.



    As for IP theft, the industry is using Apple as its collective R&D dept. Just look a what went on at CES.



    Not sure what Apple is "stealing" from Moto. Moto is way past its prime and needs to die. You wouldn't see a suit like this had they been flush with cash. Moto is just taking up space and resources at this point.
  • Reply 22 of 27
    matrix07matrix07 Posts: 1,993member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by I am a Zither Zather Zuzz View Post


    Apple has GOT to stop stealing IP from other companies. If they cannot innovate, they should pay the price and license it from them.



    It is unseemly that they steal from other companies. It is giving them a bad reputation.



    Mike Daisey mk II.
  • Reply 23 of 27
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Quadra 610 View Post


    Apple's reputation seems pretty solid. Those blockbuster sales don't come from a bad rep.



    As for IP theft, the industry is using Apple as its collective R&D dept. Just look a what went on at CES.



    Not sure what Apple is "stealing" from Moto. Moto is way past its prime and needs to die. You wouldn't see a suit like this had they been flush with cash. Moto is just taking up space and resources at this point.



    Are you implying that CES had a bunch of Apple clone devices? If so could you kindly point to them?



    Or are you implying that CES featured tech from companies responding to Apple? In that case...duh.
  • Reply 24 of 27
    quadra 610quadra 610 Posts: 6,757member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by AbsoluteDesignz View Post


    Are you implying that CES had a bunch of Apple clone devices? If so could you kindly point to them?



    Or are you implying that CES featured tech from companies responding to Apple? In that case...duh.



    http://english.cri.cn/6826/2012/01/14/1461s676267.htm



    Quote:



    Showcasing more than 20,000 products from a record number of over 3,200 exhibitors in an exhibition space of 0.17 million square meters, the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show (CES) turned out to be one of the largest in the event's 44-year-old history.



    Though Apple was absent, its dominating influence was felt everywhere throughout the world's largest consumer technology trade show, which ended in Las Vegas on Friday.



    While other top-notch brands are touting their versions of Ultrabook, Smartphone, Smart TV and Tablets, Apple once again proved its status as the industry's most innovative firm and role model.



    Over 300 companies exhibited Apple accessories, even more defined their products in terms of Apple's products.



    "It's now clear that one theme will dominate this year's International Consumer Electronics Show: catching up with Apple," said the San Francisco Chronicle on its website.




    At last year's CES, it was all about Tablets. This year, the super-thin Ultrabooks are in the show's spotlight. The "Ultrabook" laptops are making computers as attractive as Tablets while retaining standard performance.



    More than 30 types of Ultrabooks were presented by PC makers such as Hewlett-Packard, Lenovo, Acer, Samsung and others.



    The concept of "Ultrabook" was created by computer processor giant Intel in 2011 in response to Apple's Macbook Air.



    CNET, the official streaming media partner of CES, said in a review that "The Ultrabook format has been described as a MacBook Air running the Windows OS."



    In the competition for the best Smartphone of CES 2012, Nokia's Lumia 900 came out on top, staging a comeback for the mobile phone leader Nokia after it joined hands with software giant Microsoft. Other ambitious contenders include Lenovo K800, the world's first Smartphone containing Intel's powerful chip.



    However, no matter how smart, fast or pretty the new Smartphones are, their significance to the industry in the innovative sense is overshadowed by Apple's iPhone.



    Matthias Person, an exhibitor and chief executive officer of the German company iBolt, which is doing business related to Apple's products, told Xinhua that he thought iPhone is still the most popular one on the market.



    "Maybe there will be an increase in Android systems in the future, but Apple will still have the lead in this technology," he said.



    As regards living room technology, Smart TV dominated the scene.



    Samsung, LG, Lenovo, Hisense and many other TV manufacturers were promoting their Smart TVs at the show.



    Liu Jun, Lenovo's senior vice president, told media at the sidelines of the CES that Smart TV is the new trend and will ultimately replace traditional TV.



    Philip Newton, Samsung Australia's audiovisual director, told media that Apple TV is old news, but that Smart TV is the future and has already arrived.



    But that future seems to have Apple written all over it, as competitors are already anticipating Apple's iTV, the last project of the deceased Apple co-founder Steve Jobs.



    The release of Microsoft's Windows 8 operating system is being praised by industry insiders and is seen as a milestone for the software giant. This signals Microsoft's entry into the fields of communication and the Internet, Liu Jun said.



    However, global financial services firm Morgan Stanley was not at all optimistic that Windows 8 is able to pump up PC sales to beat Apple.



    "We are in the middle of a technology revolution," Consumer Electronics Association chief Gary Shapiro told Xinhua. However, a real revolution to lift the industry out of Apple's shadow has yet to take place.





    When it comes to ideas that are effectively workable and marketable, the industry outside Cupertino is bankrupt. The name of the game is to follow Apple or attempt to clone their products as closely as possible.
  • Reply 25 of 27
    Just look at once great tech companies that went bust because they could not innovate; Kodak, Wang, Polaroid, Palm. Others like Rim and Motorola are close to the edge.*



    Companies don't invest in innovation*for fear of becomming more irrelevant then they already are when their products don't sell.



    The only model of successful innovation is Apple's. The choices for companies today are: 1. copy Apple, 2. go bust, or 3. turn back time and troll your patents to make a few bucks.



    Most companies are in one of these three categories, and it's getting worse as anyone with an ounce of creativity is streaming towards Apple.



    Trollarola won't be home for Xmas.
  • Reply 26 of 27
    sunilramansunilraman Posts: 8,133member
    Nein Pushen? (Yes, I know no German)
  • Reply 27 of 27
    sunilramansunilraman Posts: 8,133member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by AbsoluteDesignz View Post


    Are you implying that CES had a bunch of Apple clone devices? If so could you kindly point to them?



    Or are you implying that CES featured tech from companies responding to Apple? In that case...duh.



    CES is the equivalent of the fake Chinese Apple Stoer[sic]
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