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To: John Hull who wrote (163524)4/4/2002 8:56:04 PM
From: John Hull  Respond to of 186894
 
All- interesting news story:

Qualcomm discovers faulty chip
news.com.com
By Ben Charny
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
April 4, 2002, 4:10 PM PT

Qualcomm said Thursday it found problems in a "small portion" of the chips it created for higher speed cell phones.
The company confirmed the problems alluded to earlier Thursday by phone maker Audiovox. Chief Executive Philip Christopher said some of its new phones required software modifications to correct a problem created by the Qualcomm chips inside.

"Qualcomm acknowledges that a potential error could occur in a small portion of the early shipment of its CDMA2000 1X chipsets," Qualcomm said in a statement. CDMA2000 1X cell phones are capable of downloading information at speeds similar to a dial-up Internet connection.



A company representative said the error was corrected and that Qualcomm has begun shipping large volumes of the chips again. Qualcomm did not release details about what was wrong with the earlier chips.

Christopher made the disclosure during a conference call with analysts Thursday. He was asked when the company's 9155 GPX handset, which has a global position service built into it, would be ready for the market. He said carriers hadn't approved the phone yet because of a problem with Qualcomm chips inside.

Christopher said that 1 million Audiovox phones had the chips inside, but he did not know what percentage might be faulty. He added that other phone manufacturers were having trouble with the chips as well, but declined to name them.

The chips are part of Qualcomm's "next generation" offerings for wireless devices that use the cell phone standard code division multiple access, or CDMA. The two chips are the MSM5100 and the MSM5105.

Audiovox, which is making future phones such as the Thera, told analysts during a conference call Thursday that it had experienced a sharp drop in sales.

One of the reasons was that wireless carriers weren't approving as quickly as expected the new cell phones with Qualcomm's chips inside, according to an Audiovox representative.

so, how does the cell phone market react to this? demand for recalls or does it blow over? Who will be first to figure out if this fault and its software fix creates some kind of performance/features compromise?

After Intel's experience in this area, its always interesting to see how other major chip players react.


regards,
jh



To: John Hull who wrote (163524)4/4/2002 10:02:52 PM
From: AK2004  Respond to of 186894
 
John
re: No. Don't see why it would.
the part about "intel inside" with short battery life
-Albert