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Technology Stocks : Qualcomm Moderated Thread - please read rules before posting -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: JMD who wrote (1596)7/29/2000 8:11:07 PM
From: Another John  Respond to of 196649
 
Mike,

I would recommend that you have a good read of the S1 which is available at:

sec.gov

This document will keep you reading until the announcement Monday morning! Its about 100 pages.

There is also a second document 10-12G which is about 172 pages, should you finish the S1 early I would like a short version of the latter.

Regards,

John

PS This will at least clear any confusion and may also render you blind but knowledgeable.



To: JMD who wrote (1596)7/30/2000 10:44:09 PM
From: cfoe  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 196649
 
Why did the Mighty Q have to become two little q's to stamp out GSM ASICs?

I will try and answer your question.

Making and selling are two different things. Even if QCOM could make GSM chips now, they would need a license to sell them from a GSM license holder. Just like anyone could make a CDMA chip now (if they knew how), but could not offer it to the market without a license from QCOM.

With ASIC div and QCOM as one, when QCOM goes for GSM rights, holders were probably asking for royalty-free x-license to ALL of QCOM's CDMA patents. QCOM (and us stockholders) consider this an mighty unfair trade. All rights to the technology future wireless will be based on for rights to the old technology? Come on!

QCOM's answer: spin off chip div into separate company and give it enough essential/necessary/useful CDMA IPR to trade for necessary GSM rights. Retain rest of essential/necessary/useful CDMA IPR in QCOM so GSMers still need to pay QCOM a royalty.

Neat move.

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