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To: Joe NYC who wrote (23236)2/22/1999 11:04:00 PM
From: Pierre  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 152472
 
22 February 1999

Ericsson AB, the world's No. 3 mobile phone maker, played
down a newspaper report it's "close" to an accord with U.S.
rival Qualcomm Inc. that would end a three-year lawsuit over
cellular phone-technology patents.

The Wall Street Journal, citing unidentified people familiar
with the matter, said the companies are about to sign an
accord allowing each to use the other's technology. The case
is slated to come to trial in April in federal court in Marshall,
Texas.

"We hope we'll be able to solve this issue in a more civilized
way than going to court," said Eric Oesterberg, an Ericsson
spokesman. However, "we're still discussing."

Under the proposed settlement being reported by the Journal,
Stockholm-based Ericsson could sell phones using
Code-Division Multiple Access, or CDMA, technology that's
been championed by Qualcomm, and Qualcomm would get
access to Ericsson's patents to a rival digital technology called
Global System for Mobile communication, or GSM.

While Europe is currently unified by one standard for mobile
communications based on GSM, the U.S. has three - GSM,
Digital Advanced Mobile Phone Service, or D-AMPS, and
CDMA. That's made it harder for the U.S. to back one single
standard for the third generation of mobile technology, which
will allows users to send postcards, get real-time news and
even hold video conferences on the run.

The European Union and Japan have already chosen
wideband CDMA, a technology backed by Ericsson and
Finland's Nokia Oyj, the world's top mobile phone maker.

An agreement between Ericsson and Qualcomm could help
resolve a looming trade conflict over the future of wireless
standards, the paper said.

"We think there'll be a family of standards," said Ericsson's
Oesterberg.

The proposed settlement would also allow Qualcomm, which
gets much of its revenue from making wireless
communications chips, to make semiconductors for "global"
phones using both technologies and might also make such
telephones itself, the Wall Street Journal said.

In October, Qualcomm said Ericsson dropped claims against it
for three patents in the lawsuit filed in Texas, and surrendered
its rights to two separate disputed patents.

© EMAP Media 1999