Some one asked about agreements with IBM this week I believe..
: IBM, 3Com Ink Licensing Deal Aug 13, 1999 (Tech Web - CMP via COMTEX) -- Marching on in its bid to become a top provider of computer and networking components, IBM signed a cross-licensing pact with 3Com, giving each wide access to the other's technology. Under terms of the deal, IBM, in Armonk, N.Y., and 3Com, in Santa Clara, Calif., will share patents on IBM technology including server access, load balancing, Web caching, ATM/Ethernet/Token Ring, network-interface cards and network management. IBM will have access to 3Com technology that includes hardware and software on handheld devices, network-interface cards, modem technology, as well as routers, switches, voice-over-IP, and LAN telephony. The pact between the two companies is the latest major deal for the IBM Technology Group. Earlier this year, it signed multibillion-dollar deals with Dell Computer, in Round Rock, Texas; The Acer Group, in Taipei, Taiwan; and EMC, in Hopkington, Mass., in which IBM will supply computer and networking technology and components. The division is also in talks with Compaq Computer, in Houston, about a major outsourcing deal, including the licensing of IBM's copper-processor technology, said executives at both companies. IBM's agreement with 3Com is not the first between the two companies, as both have had long-standing licensing agreements. Bruce Claflin, 3Com's president, is also a former top executive at IBM PC. "What's occurring [is] each company is getting access to the patents of the other," said Tony Baker, director of intellectual property and licensing for the IBM Technology Group. Baker reports to Jim Vanderslice, IBM's senior vice president for the Technology Group, and is a force behind the partnering moves. "We're excited about it," Baker said. "It just promotes the relationship between the two companies." Unlike the other megadeals, the 3Com agreement is not being measured in dollars and cents. "It gives me access to patents of 3Com's that I can incorporate into technology products and sell in the OEM space," Baker said. "It empowers them with the same ability. It gives freedom of action. I can now take some of their innovation in the areas of modems, and use it in the ideas I have," he said. While the agreement gives IBM the right to use the technology patented by 3Com, and vice versa, it is not automatic the companies can crank out new SKUs immediately. "I have to figure out the work with my development team and express it in a physical entity," Baker said. "But it allows us to use products in the future, with no concern [over violating legal boundaries]." For example, 3Com last year was awarded a patent for a "Media connector interface for use with a PCMCIA-architecture communications card," he said. The technology, an interface between a connector and a communications card in a computer system for use with a 5mm PCMCIA card, is capable of providing a direct-media connector interface for use in a laptop or notebook, according to the text of the actual patent. "If I were one of the [reseller] partners, we'd have a chance to build more products," said Jean Myers, manager of strategic relationships in networking systems business at 3Com. "We don't have to invent all of the technology ourselves. We have an open view of patent portfolios." An ongoing relationship between 3Com and IBM made it easier to get the deal completed, Myers said. "There's been a seven-year business relationship relative to selling each other's products," she said. |