October 22nd, 2008 by
Filed under: Home Entertainment
Ah, Qflix. That snazzy burn technology that enables users to toast CinemaNow flicks onto specially-keyed blank DVD media for playback in your DVD player. For the eight people out there that still find this appealing, Pioneer is looking to compete with a handful of rivals by introducing the internal DVR-2920Q and external DVR-X162Q DVD / CD writers, both of which are Qflix-enabled. Each drive is also bundled with Roxio Venue software to facilitate the whole download-to-DVD process, and the Roxio CinePlayer will allow you to play back the resulting disc right on your PC (should you so choose). Mum’s the word on a price / release date, but the pair ought to be hitting soon enough.
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Posted in drm, DVD, dvd burner, DvdBurner, Qflix, pioneer, licensing, Sonic Solutions, SonicSolutions, cinemanow, DVR-2920Q, DVR-X162Q | No Comments »
August 8th, 2008 by
Filed under: Gaming
A select bunch of Transmeta investors may not completely agree with how the outfit is being managed, but one thing’s for sure: it’s bringing in some serious coin on this deal. During a brief timeout from counting those stacks of Benjamins handed over by Intel, it decided to license its Long Run and LongRun 2 technologies (among “other intellectual property”) to NVIDIA for a cool $25 million. Additionally, the agreement grants NVIDIA a “non-exclusive and fully paid-up license” to all of Transmeta’s patents and patent applications. Unfortunately, it’s still unclear how exactly this will end up affecting NVIDIA fanboys (and girls), but we’ll go out on a limb and suggest that a mobile GTX 280 with a remarkably low power draw is just around the bend.
[Via SlashGear]
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Posted in nvidia, court, lawsuit, legal, settlement, sue, suit, graphics, license, licensing, transmeta, payment, Long Run, LongRun, LongRun2 | No Comments »
October 8th, 2007 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
Vonage, everyone’s favorite “gettin’ sued by The Man” company has taken another beating in the Sprint-Nextel patent suit, agreeing to settle the case and license the telco’s Internet-calling technology for the tidy sum of $80 million. This comes hot on the heels of last month’s ruling, which stipulated that Vonage was to pay $69.5 million to Sprint over six patents which the mobile phone company says it had infringed. “We are pleased to resolve our dispute with Sprint and enter into a productive future relationship,” said Sharon O’Leary, General Counsel for Vonage, though it’s possible she wasn’t as ecstatic as that quote would have you believe. This is just another money-siphoning event for the VoIP company, which in March was hit up for $66 million from Verizon for illegally using some of its patents. If you’re keeping count at home, that’s $215.5 million paid out. If this keeps up, they may not even be able to afford those snappy commercials anymore. [Warning: read link requires subscription]
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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

Posted in patent, supreme court, SupremeCourt, voip, lawsuit, legal, sprint, suit, vonage, internet telephony, InternetTelephony, infringment, licensing, litigation, nextel | No Comments »