SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : Qualcomm Incorporated (QCOM) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: DaveMG who wrote (23423)2/25/1999 1:57:00 PM
From: Ruffian  Respond to of 152472
 
Dr. Jacobs>
Standard on digital wireless due soon | Jacobs hopeful it will suit
Qualcomm
The San Diego Union-Tribune

In unusually upbeat comments, Qualcomm
Chairman Irwin Jacobs says the fractious wireless
industry is nearing agreement on a new standard
for digital wireless communications that is
compatible with Qualcomm's CDMA technology.

Jacobs' outbreak of optimism came yesterday during the company's annual
shareholders' meeting at Qualcomm's San Diego headquarters.

"We are reaching a point where I am beginning to feel quite confident -- not
100 percent, of course, but quite confident -- that we'll be able to achieve a
standard that we feel comfortable with," Jacobs said. The founding chairman
and chief executive also hinted that Qualcomm has been negotiating with
arch-rival Ericsson AB across a broad range of strategic, legal and technical
issues vital to both companies.

Qualcomm and Ericsson are longtime bitter foes. But analysts say
fundamental economic forces are driving them to agree on a wireless digital
standard for the future -- the so-called 3G or third-generation system --
allowing both technologies to operate.

"Frankly, I think they're going to cut a deal," said Bob Egan, a
telecommunications analyst for the [ Gartner Group ] . "I don't know what the
timing will be. But I think it's good for Ericsson, and I think it's good for
Qualcomm."

In response to a shareholder's question, Jacobs said he had "nothing to report"
concerning pre-trial negotiations under way to settle a patent infringement suit
filed in 1996 by Ericsson against Qualcomm.

But Jacobs suggested that Qualcomm could work with a partner which
specializes in Global Systems Monitoring, or GSM, a rival cellular technology
dominant in Europe. Sweden-based Ericsson, the world's third-largest maker
of wireless telephones, holds numerous GSM patents and is a major player in
the European market.

Jacobs maintained that Qualcomm has not focused on asserting its patent
claims for CDMA, a type of digital wireless technology whose name stands
for code division multiple access.

"The main thing we've focused on is ensuring that certain markets be open,"
Jacobs said.

The best way to ensure openness, he added, is to ensure that the marketplace
can select the best technology from all available options. After years of
battling rivals and critics over the merits of Qualcomm's CDMA technology,
Jacobs said his optimism was due to the changing tenor of recent talks among
industry officials. He was especially heartened by a meeting of American and
European telecommunications executives held last week in Washington.

Those talks ended with a resolution broadly supporting a third-generation
standard for CDMA-based wireless communications that "converges"
Qualcomm's cdma2000 technology with W-CDMA technology supported by
Ericsson. The resolution marked a departure from previous statements issued
by the European Technical Standards Institute and certain European
companies, said the CDMA Development Group, a nonprofit trade
association. "This is the first step in resolving the current 3G impasse," said
Perry LaForge, the group's executive director. "We finally have everyone
supporting convergence and stressing the need for commonality among the
modes of the standard."

The meeting in Washington, held under the auspices of the TransAtlantic
Business Dialogue, was part of a broader international effort to work out a
global 3G standard. A U.N. agency, the International Telecommunications
Union, is expected to draw up a single global standard for 3G wireless
communications by Dec. 31.

Until recent developments hinted of a broader agreement, Qualcomm was
advocating the adoption of its cdma2000 as the preferred standard. Ericsson
was pushing its Wideband CDMA, which is incompatible with Qualcomm's
system.

Jacobs outlined the international negotiations over a new CDMA standard
while presenting an overview of the company's 1998 operations. Although
many technical details must still be resolved, Jacobs told more than 250
shareholders, "The main thing from our point of view is that it does allow a
single standard to be adopted."

(Copyright 1999)

_____via IntellX_____

Publication Date: February 24, 1999
Powered by NewsReal's IndustryWatch



To: DaveMG who wrote (23423)2/25/1999 6:18:00 PM
From: straight life  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 152472
 
"Frankly, I think Ericsson and Qualcomm deserve each other. There's something faintly satanic and scarily similar about the way these companies scheme, manipulate and prevaricate their way through the telecom world. I don't mean this in a negative sense."

No, Tero means the positive "...satanic and scarily similar" prevaricators and manipulators...

What a guy. I think he went to the Marc Cabi School-O-Charm.



To: DaveMG who wrote (23423)2/27/1999 10:30:00 AM
From: DaveMG  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 152472
 
And a different perspective:

cbs.marketwatch.com