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Technology Stocks : WDC/Sandisk Corporation
WDC 162.40+2.9%3:59 PM EST

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To: david james who wrote (14587)9/7/2000 9:18:08 PM
From: Ausdauer  Read Replies (1) of 60323
 
Lawsuits

"The court further denied Lexar's request that SanDisk make no further representations
stating or implying that SanDisk CompactFlash cards are faster than Lexar CompactFlash cards
in the following camera models:

Hewlett Packard C20, Epson Photo PC 700, Kodak DC120 and Kodak DC210."


The basis of this lawsuit is some obscure table that no average consumer would ever be able to find on their own. At that time "release-to-click" times were on the order of 5 seconds or longer indicating the computational power of the host device was the major roadblock. Just look at the cameras in question and realize that this suit dates back at least two years, a time when CompactFlash sales were quite unimpressive. It seems doubtful that Lexar lost any significant revenues as a result. Since that time (with the flash memory market sizzling hot) Lexar has been able to garner a significant piece of the flash memory card aftermarket (per the CEO's recent interview), so it seems unlikely this chart had any material effect on Lexar's prospects.

I think SanDisk was disallowed use of the chart in question based on a subsequent court decision. No big deal. The chart was outdated a few months after it was released anyway. IMHO, SanDisk has never tried to market its CompactFlash on the basis of write speed. We have bemoaned this fact on our thread ad nauseum.

The above lawsuit seems nothing more than a fly in the ointment. It is a minor distraction aimed at taking the spotlight off of the real lawsuit, Lexar's infringement of SanDisk's '987 patent.

Ausdauer
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