Qualcomm Inc said it has bought a portfolio of patents from Hewlett-Packard Co, acquiring intellectual property that includes the fundamentals of mobile operating systems.
Qualcomm said in a statement yesterday that the purchased portfolio consists of about 1,400 granted patents and pending applications in the US, and about 1,000 granted and being applied for in other countries.
The San Diego-based company did not disclose the price of the deal.
The world’s largest maker of mobile-phone chips, which gets the majority of its profit from technology licensing, said it will use the patents to “offer even more value to current and future licensees.”
The chipmaker charges royalties to handset makers and rival semiconductor companies for the use of its code division multiple access (CDMA) wireless technology, which has become part of most high-speed mobile data systems.
Bloomberg News reported in October last year that Hewlett-Packard was seeking to sell some mobile-computing patents as part of chief executive Meg Whitman’s attempt to bolster the company’s financial position. The patents on the block included those related to WebOS, the smartphone and tablet operating system that the company bought through its 2010 acquisition of Palm Inc.
Hewlett-Packard will maintain a license to the patents sold, company spokesman Michael Thacker said.
The value of the patents Qualcomm acquired will be determined by how much they have already been used in cross-licensing agreements struck by Hewlett-Packard, MDB Capital Group managing director Erin-Michael Gill said.
MDB is an intellectual property-focused investment bank based in Santa Monica, California.
“Now they’re in the hands of someone that might be more effective in monetizing these assets,” Gill said. “Hewlett-Packard may still be able to participate in the upside of the monetization efforts of Qualcomm.”
Qualcomm said the patents it purchased include those related to Palm, as well as to Hewlett-Packard’s iPaq mobile devices. The deal also includes technology from Hewlett-Packard’s 2007 acquisition of Bitfone Corp, a maker of device-management software.
The portfolio includes patents granted in China, the UK, Germany, Japan and South Korea, showing they have “broad foreign coverage,” Qualcomm spokeswoman Emily Kilpatrick said.
Existing Qualcomm licensees will have access to the patents, she said.
Hewlett-Packard, based in Palo Alto, California, did not manage to make Palm’s WebOS — part of a US$1.2 billion acquisition — into a success. The company later wrote down the deal and Whitman sold the WebOS operating system’s code to LG Electronics Inc last year.
Qualcomm shares rose less than 1 percent to US$75.87 at the close on Thursday in New York. Hewlett-Packard shares fell 1.6 percent to US$29.37.
Starlux Airlines Co (星宇航空) today unveiled a long-haul network expansion plan at a shareholders’ meeting in Taipei, including direct flights to Barcelona, Spain, and Zurich, Switzerland, as well as a service connecting Taipei, Sydney and New Zealand. Starlux is to become the first Taiwanese carrier to offer non-stop services to the two European cities, while the inaugural oceanic route is expected to expand transit opportunities within the Australia-New Zealand market, Starlux said. Flight services to Chicago, Dallas, Washington and New York are under evaluation, the airline added. Prior to the shareholders’ meeting, the airline earlier this year announced that it would be
Cairo’s new monorail slices across the city skyline, running above the familiar chaos of blaring horns and aging buses’ exhaust fumes that mark rush hour below. The US$4.5 billion monorail, opened this month, is among Egypt’s most prominent new transport projects, part of a debt-funded infrastructure drive criticized for sapping state finances while bringing limited benefits to most of the country’s 109 million people. “It feels like you’re in a different country,” said Ramy Sayed, a restaurant manager, aboard a driverless Innovia 300 train. “No noise, no traffic, we’re not used to this.” The eastern line runs 56km from the bustling middle-class
Netherlands-based semiconductor equipment supplier ASML Holding NV yesterday said that it is planning to hire an additional 1,000 people in Taiwan this year in response to growing demand from clients. ASML had previously planned to recruit 600 people this year, but that the plan has been adjusted upward, ASML vice president and ASML Taiwan general manager Grace Wang (汪佳慧) told reporters. ASML has a workforce of more than 4,500 in Taiwan, accounting for about 10 percent of its global total, Wang said. This year’s recruitment campaign would focus on adding people in the customer support, manufacturing and supply chain domains to assist ASML
Nvidia Corp yesterday announced that CEO Jensen Huang (黃仁勳) would attend an employee meeting in Taipei tomorrow to celebrate the launch of the company’s Taiwan headquarters project. Huang would attend a gathering at the site of Nvidia’s planned headquarters in Beitou Shilin Technology Park (北投士林科技園區), the company said in a statement. After arriving in Taiwan on Saturday last week, Huang told reporters that he plans to meet with Quanta Computer Inc (廣達) chairman Barry Lam (林百里) and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) chairman C.C. Wei (魏哲家), and would attend the groundbreaking ceremony for Nvidia’s Taiwan headquarters tomorrow. Nvidia has not yet applied