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


To: foundation who wrote (6403)1/23/2001 8:22:20 AM
From: foundation  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 197056
 
SnapTrack Awarded Patent For Locating or
Tracking Wireless Devices Via Internet and
Client-Server-Based Computer Networks

Location and Tracking Method Spans Variety of Wireless Location Systems

SAN JOSE, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jan. 23, 2001-- SnapTrack, Inc., pioneer of Wireless Assisted GPS(TM) location systems, and a wholly owned subsidiary of QUALCOMM Incorporated (Nasdaq: QCOM - news), announced today the award of a broad-based wireless location and asset-tracking patent by the United States Patent and Trademark Office. The patent, No. 6,131,067, describes methods for remotely locating or tracking a wireless device via client-server systems that use a computer network or Web browser to initiate a request of a wireless device's position, and receive the device's position either as data or a graphic display using maps or other reference tools. The award of this patent enhances SnapTrack's leading position in next-generation tracking systems and implementations.

``SnapTrack is pushing ahead across a broad front to enable mass market location-based applications with the most advanced wireless location technology available,'' said Steve Poizner, president of SnapTrack. ``We believe that SnapTrack's continued research efforts will help strengthen our partner and licensee service offerings, and will provide our licensees' customers with the most advanced wireless location systems possible.''

SnapTrack pioneered an advanced form of Global Positioning System (GPS) technology known as Wireless Assisted GPS that uses the U.S. government GPS satellites to locate wireless phones and other wireless devices with high precision for emergency purposes and commercial location-based services. SnapTrack's system enables carriers to meet the demands of the Federal Communications Commission's (FCC) E9-1-1 mandate, and also enables the design of cellular phones, pagers, and PDAs that provide users with a host of new mobile location services and e-commerce applications such as personal directions and mobile yellow pages.

In the past six months, SnapTrack has received approximately 10 new patents for inventions that improve the sensitivity and performance of its Wireless Assisted GPS system. SnapTrack now holds 24 patents, with more than three dozen additional patents pending. These patents are critical to the efficient, cost-effective deployment of Wireless Assisted GPS location systems.

QUALCOMM CDMA Technologies (QCT) has integrated SnapTrack technology into its own gpsOne(TM) solutions. QCT has already sampled the MSM3300(TM) Mobile Station Modem (MSM(TM)) integrated circuit to a range of handset manufacturers, with handsets expected to be available later this year. The MSM3300 GPS-enabled digital baseband integrated circuit is complemented by QCT's RFR3300(TM)/IFR3300(TM) GPS-enabled RF chips. In addition, QUALCOMM has announced that it plans to integrate SnapTrack technology into upcoming gpsOne 3G products, including its MSM5200(TM) WCDMA baseband integrated circuit and other future products supporting cdma2000 1x, cdma2000 1xEV, and WCDMA. SnapTrack technology is the handset-based position location solution of choice to address the U.S. FCC E9-1-1 emergency wireless calling mandate. More than 30 U.S. carriers have filed for a handset-based approach to meeting the E9-1-1 mandate. QUALCOMM wireless assisted GPS position location solutions are also widely adopted by major Japanese carriers.

In a separate announcement, SnapTrack's parent company QUALCOMM reported victories in three additional opposition proceedings in Europe and Korea in which all claims of QUALCOMM's patents were upheld.

biz.yahoo.com
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There have been numerous press releases for other GPS systems (NOK recently in China) - it will be interesting to see if any of them rely on SnapTrack IP....

ben



To: foundation who wrote (6403)1/23/2001 10:08:16 AM
From: laodeng  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 197056
 
Hi, Ben:

Does this legal victory mean that Mot has to remodify their wcdma license?

laodeng



To: foundation who wrote (6403)1/23/2001 11:46:16 AM
From: mightylakers  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 197056
 
One thing strange about this release is this:

In a decision dated December 5, 2000, the European Patent Office confirmed the validity of all claims of QUALCOMM's European patent 624,275. The patent, entitled ``Method and System for the Arrangement of Vocoder Data for the Masking of Transmission Channel Induced Error,'' discloses a processor used in CDMA receivers to normalize incoming blocks of data.



Why the story was not told by then?