At CES this week, MediaTek and Nvidia confirmed rumors that they are partnering on a new generation of Arm chips for PCS.
Arm did not get the thing it most wanted in its lawsuit with Qualcomm – a legal ban on Qualcomm using Nuvia-designed Arm-based cores in its PC chip-sets.
Arm Holdings talked a good game, but it played a losing hand to a predictable outcome. And its retrial claims are just more ...
Qualcomm is synonymous with top-tier smartphone performance these days, but the market was once much more competitive.
Late last Friday afternoon, inside the U.S. District Courthouse in Wilmington, Del., the jury in a bitter case between two computer-chip giants, Arm Holdings (ARM) and Qualcomm (QCOM), handed a win to ...
Wilmington, Del., gave wireless-chip maker Qualcomm (QCOM) a partial victory in its legal battle with Arm Holdings (ARM) .
The legal standoff between Qualcomm and Arm reached an interim resolution last week when a US District Court for the District of Delaware jury ruled that Qualcomm's acquisition of Nuvia and the ...
However, the jury could not decide if Nuvia breached its license with Arm, leading to a mistrial on that issue. While Qualcomm claimed the verdict supported its innovation rights, Arm expressed ...
Qualcomm won key points in a licensing dispute with Arm over its acquisition of Nuvia, retaining rights to continue developing custom CPU cores. A jury deadlocked on Nuvia's alleged breach of its ...
Qualcomm may integrate the CPU cores acquired with the purchase of the start-up Nuvia into its own processors. The license agreement that Nuvia had originally concluded with ARM was not violated ...
The jury denied ARM on two out of three points, and couldn’t reach an agreement regarding Nuvia. The company will sue Qualcomm again. ARM will demand a retrial of part of its licensing lawsuit against ...