Apple, Qualcomm reach modem licensing deal to end 'no license, no chips' trial

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  • Reply 81 of 127
    MplsPmplsp Posts: 4,106member
    sacto joe said:
    So what's your problem with waiting to find out more before making conjecture. I've already said I'll hold. You, on the other hand....
    half of this site is people commenting on rumors by one analyst or another. Basically conjecture on conjecture. That's what a lot of people come to this site for - to debate topics with other interested people. 
    gatorguyasdasdmuthuk_vanalingam
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  • Reply 82 of 127
    sacto joe said:
    Conjecture piled on conjecture. If you really knew what Apple was concerned with, you'd be working for them, and you wouldn't be posting here.
    😉 
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  • Reply 83 of 127
    Is there a law that Apple can release a new phone or a refresh once a year in September?

    I would be VERY disappointed in Tim if he held off on a 5G phone until Sept 2020 because the Sept 2019 refresh was already set.  Actually, now would be a GREAT time to end that stupidity:   Instead of focusing on simply putting out the world's greatest products, they have this show once a year where the biggest question is always whether Apple succeeded or failed - rather than the worthiness of the product.
    I’m sure that Apple has a contingency plan to put a Qualcomm 5G capable modem in whatever they are making for this year, but I wouldn’t count on it. 
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  • Reply 84 of 127
    mdriftmeyermdriftmeyer Posts: 7,503member
    gatorguy said:
    Apparently a 6-year royalty license to the IP, tho no mention of a license to manufacture. I would guess that Apple is forgoing further development of their own chip for the near future, at least in any shipping device, since they've agreed to purchase QC chips for multiple years as part of this settlement. 
    You would be wrong.
    ericthehalfbeetmay
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  • Reply 85 of 127

    Sadly the settlement takes the FRAND issue off the table. Just once I’d like to see one of these FRAND holders forced to license their ip on FRAND terms, and have a court determine how that apportionment works.  
    thtasdasdemoeller
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  • Reply 86 of 127
    MplsP said:
    half of this site is people commenting on rumors by one analyst or another. Basically conjecture on conjecture. That's what a lot of people come to this site for - to debate topics with other interested people. 

    Half of this site is comprised of reasonable people making common sense deductions of what’s going on while the other half desperately try to twist things to always have Apple come out in the losing end. 
    tmayMplsP
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  • Reply 87 of 127
    radarthekatradarthekat Posts: 3,938moderator
    sacto joe said:
    I think this is closer to the mark than "Qualcomm won, Apple lost". And if it's right, then Apple came out ahead in the medium and long term, while Qualcomm gets to live a while longer. 

    But I'll hold off on any more opinions for now. My go-to source is http://www.fosspatents.com and he hasn't weighed in on this yet.
    Apple’s ethics and willingness to stand its ground suggests to me that Apple would not have backed down without there being a deal struck that not only was palatable financially, but also cleared the double dipping issue central to its complaint.  

    But that does leave on the table a deal that still gives QC a percentage of the iPhone’s price.  That’s a pricing issue, not an ethical issue.  I would hope Apple negotiates well on this point, using the six year deal as a bargaining point.  

    I’m confident someone will leak details about the deal, in short order. 
    edited April 2019
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  • Reply 88 of 127
    tmaytmay Posts: 6,465member
    You would be wrong.
    You are absolutely correct. Apple will continue development of their own modem for release in the near term.
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  • Reply 89 of 127
    asdasdasdasd Posts: 5,686member
    sacto joe said:
    Conjecture piled on conjecture. If you really knew what Apple was concerned with, you'd be working for them, and you wouldn't be posting here.
    It was an interesting post nevertheless, unlike the inane bleating of conjecture when someone doesn’t like a post. This is a discussion forum where people will obviously engage in speculation. 
    radarthekatchemenginMplsPgatorguyhammeroftruthmuthuk_vanalingam
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  • Reply 90 of 127
    sacto joe said:
    Wow! Basically, Qualcomm blinked. This is going to be a positive for AAPL's price....although maybe the word had leaked out some time ago, and that would explain the big push upward for AAPL lately. Was this the worst kept secret in the world?

    Inquiring minds want to know…

    Interesting theory, but I somehow doubt it. The same people who had access to that secret would have been foolish to not invest in Qualcomm, whose stock would be expected to rise an even larger percentage than Apple’s, on news like this. 
    chemengin
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  • Reply 91 of 127
    asdasdasdasd Posts: 5,686member

    Sadly the settlement takes the FRAND issue off the table. Just once I’d like to see one of these FRAND holders forced to license their ip on FRAND terms, and have a court determine how that apportionment works.  
    Isn’t that what Qualcomm are being sued for in seperate trials by the FTC and other agencies. 
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  • Reply 92 of 127
    jbdragonjbdragon Posts: 2,313member
    Qualcomm Blinked...
    How do you know? Maybe Apple blinked. Maybe they both did. It says Apple is paying out money. What about that huge Refund Apple is suppose to have gotten and didn't?

    As for Apple discussions. Apple could have not talked to them in months. Now as trial is starting up, one or the other blinked. Was it Apple or Qualcomm? One of them didn't want to see this going to trial. I'm leaning on Qualcomm as I think they had more to lose. Like basing their prices on the overall cost of the phone and not the FRAND patent cost. If Apple wins, costs for everyone else could be dropping also.

    There's not much to go on. I don't see people talking out the terms to the public at large. May not ever find out what really happened, or in 8 years or whatever when the contract expires and there's another fight once again.
    edited April 2019
    chemengin
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  • Reply 93 of 127
    emoelleremoeller Posts: 596member
    And now Intel has exited the mobile 5G modem market!   

    At this time it looks like this is a solid win for Qualcom - settled Apple/Supplier  lawsuits AND bumped off a major competitor (Intel)  But I wouldn't be surprised if Apple isn't playing the long game in that they now will be able to integrate all of Qualcom's IP in Apple's new chipsets....
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  • Reply 94 of 127
    gatorguygatorguy Posts: 24,730member
    tmay said:
    You are absolutely correct. Apple will continue development of their own modem for release in the near term.
    I did not say I believed Apple would be stopping wifi chipset development. I qualified that by saying in a shipping device.

    Of course they'll be investigating their own chipset, other companies likely are too, but the chances of seeing it in use in the next 5 years just went down with the Qualcomm settlement...
    In my opinion.  
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  • Reply 95 of 127
    gatorguygatorguy Posts: 24,730member
    asdasd said:
    It was an interesting post nevertheless, unlike the inane bleating of conjecture when someone doesn’t like a post. This is a discussion forum where people will obviously engage in speculation. 
    +1
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  • Reply 96 of 127
    thttht Posts: 5,898member
    emoeller said:
    And now Intel has exited the mobile 5G modem market!   

    At this time it looks like this is a solid win for Qualcom - settled Apple/Supplier  lawsuits AND bumped off a major competitor (Intel)  But I wouldn't be surprised if Apple isn't playing the long game in that they now will be able to integrate all of Qualcom's IP in Apple's new chipsets....
    Yeah. Dominoes fell fast and furious here. 

    Qualcomm is now the sole supplier of cellular modems in the USA, right?

    Zero chance of Huawei being able to sell modems in the USA market. Samsung? Mediatek? Broadcom maybe starts in the business?

    I can’t see how Apple can let this stand, and not do their own modem. Who knows maybe we’ll hear Apple laying off people in San Diego next, but it would be crazy for them to do that. That custom modem is the only leverage they have now. 
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  • Reply 97 of 127
    gatorguygatorguy Posts: 24,730member
    tht said:
    I wouldn’t bet on either of these scenarios.
    In the future, Apple will continue to use Intel modems
    Apparently not.
    edited April 2019
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  • Reply 98 of 127
    asdasdasdasd Posts: 5,686member
    emoeller said:
    And now Intel has exited the mobile 5G modem market!   

    At this time it looks like this is a solid win for Qualcom - settled Apple/Supplier  lawsuits AND bumped off a major competitor (Intel)  But I wouldn't be surprised if Apple isn't playing the long game in that they now will be able to integrate all of Qualcom's IP in Apple's new chipsets....
    Some speculation on twitter that Intel made this decision before today and recently informed Apple (but not I assume Qualcomm as they have no supplier agreement there).

    Hence, Apple rushes to an agreement which is more favourable to them than if Qualcomm knew.  And locks in 6 years. 

    Seems reasonable but it is I admit even more conjecture. 
    edited April 2019
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  • Reply 99 of 127
    gatorguygatorguy Posts: 24,730member
    chasm said:
    I would be very surprised if Qualcomm won more than 50 percent of Apple's 5G business after this.
    I'd be prepared to be surprised then. 
    edited April 2019
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  • Reply 100 of 127
    thttht Posts: 5,898member
    gatorguy said:
    Apparently not.
    Yup. Got that wrong. I’m still surprise at Intel’s struggles right now. 
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