[aprssig] OT: Yaesu to release digital amateur radio gear
Amateur Radio WB8NUT
duffy at wb8nut.com
Mon Jan 9 10:02:37 EST 2012
Jason, first many of the proprietary chips in our radios use technology
not developed by Kenwood, Icom, Yaesu and the like, but by those "patent
trolls" like Texas Instrument, Intel, NSI, etc.
Even if those proprietary chips were developed by Kenwood, Icom and
Yaesu on their own, does not mean that they do not infringe on some
patent owned by another company or "patent troll" as you refer to them
and could still result in a patent lawsuit.
The "Open Codec" under development could in fact be in conflict with
some patent owned by someone else. Don't know until someone looks at it
since it is "open" and says, "hey, that's my idea, my code, my method,
etc." and tries to prove it via a court action.
One has only to look at history. Linux is supposed to be "open" but that
did not stop Microsoft from obtaining royalty payments from Novell/Suse,
Linspire and others right? Just because someone has developed something
independently to try to create an "open standard" does not mean it has
not infringed on someone's existing patent.
Duffy
www.wb8nut.com
On 1/9/12 9:40 AM, Jason KG4WSV wrote:
> What you aren't taking into consideration is the unfortunate trend for
> IP to be held not by manufacturers but by litigious profiteering
> patent trolls. A Kenwood radio with a Kenwood custom IC? no big deal;
> it actually indicates to me that Kenwood is investing in the product
> line's future. A radio with a codec IC owned by a west Texas patent
> troll? That's a different animal. I'm not saying that the ABME codec
> is owned by a patent troll, but tomorrow it could be if it isn't already.
> -Jason kg4wsv _______________________________________________ aprssig
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