TalkingTech
The view from the top of IT with TechWorld Editor Rohan Pearce
Motorola Mobility abuses its dominant position in the E.U. by seeking and enforcing an injunction against Apple in Germany on the basis of its mobile phone standard-essential patents (SEPs), the European Commission said in a preliminary antitrust review of the case on Monday.
By Loek Essers | 06 May, 2013 11:52
A US judge has ruled that Motorola Mobility is entitled to substantially less royalties than it wanted from Microsoft for the company's use of wireless and video-encoding patents in its Xbox products.
By Jeremy Kirk | 26 April, 2013 05:31
The U.S. International Trade Commission has found no evidence that Apple infringed on a Motorola Mobility patent covering a touchscreen function.
By Martyn Williams | 22 April, 2013 23:02
A Motorola Mobility patent that was successfully used to force Apple to turn off its iCloud push email services for users in Germany last year could be invalid, the District Court in Mannheim, Germany, said on Friday.
By Loek Essers | 19 April, 2013 10:49
Arris Group has received clearance from the U.S. Department of Justice for its proposed acquisition of the Motorola Home business.
By John Ribeiro | 15 April, 2013 07:03
Android 'Jelly Bean,' Samsung's Notes, and Google's Nexuses finally delivered compelling capabilities as Apple stalled
By Galen Gruman | 27 December, 2012 11:10
Five years after its inception, Android is more dominant than ever in the smartphone OS market, despite facing a number of challenges along the way.
By Mikael Ricknäs | 02 November, 2012 19:56
Motorola's Droid Razr HD makes a lasting impression with its first-class build quality and outstanding battery life -- but the Android smartphone also has its fair share of flaws.
By JR Raphael | 22 October, 2012 17:52
There's new hope for Android aficionados who want IT to let them use their preferred mobile OS for work, thanks to Motorola Mobility's four business-oriented smartphones: the Photon 4G and Xpert for Sprint, Atrix 4G for AT&T Wireless, and Droid 3 for Verizon Wireless. Motorola has filled in several deficiencies of the Android operating system that keep many IT organizations from allowing its use. For example, the new Motorola devices add support for on-device encryption to Android 2.3 "Gingerbread" and support more Exchange ActiveSync (EAS) security policies, so they're now compliant with many organizations' security requirements.
By Galen Gruman | 01 September, 2011 20:04
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