Thread regarding Qualcomm Inc. layoffs

Apple officials admit Qualcomm was the only viable option for 4G modems

Aside from the fact that this helps Qualcomm's case in the dispute, but I glad I see some realistic thoughts on this dispute. Let’s not kid ourselves, If Apple had any chance of acquiring cheaper modems with a close enough quality to Qualcomm's, they would have thought twice. They would have abandoned Qualcomm as a supplier and that would be the end of the relationship. They bought Qualcomm's modems because they had nothing even close in terms of efficiency and quality and they paid the price for that. Nothing disputable about that if you ask me.

https://9to5mac.com/2019/01/22/apple-admits-qualcomm

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| 1623 views | | 7 replies (last January 24, 2019) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+XfGHFVY

7 replies (most recent on top)

@hot

  1. How is this evidence? That's like saying since there are no tigers around here, that's evidence that I'm doing a good job at keeping them away

  2. I don't know much about WiMax, but it must be pathetic considering Sprint was behind it

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Post ID: @2nij+XfGHFVY

Apple does not use any QCOM modem and all the iphone still works and nobody cares about the modem performance anymore, tbh. Leadership of a company can not drop the whole company or all the employees into a battle that, regardless of all the possible outcomes, it will be either a lose or lose-lose outcome

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Post ID: @1lvj+XfGHFVY

If memory serves, WiMax didn’t need any panning from Qualcomm. Why didn’t VERIZON join Sprint?

OFDM uplink? Seriously?

https://www.quota.com/What-is-the-difference-between-WiMAX-and-LTE

Oh Noes..

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Post ID: @1owo+XfGHFVY

The court views things from a legal angle. We engineers see the same from a very different angle. Only angle that matters to the judges decision is legal. This looks bad for the defendant, further evidence of intentional anti trust, anti competitive business tactics.

Qualcomm first to market was good, but then Qualcomm immediately suppressed competition with its business practices, by clearly using its market position to force customers to an all Qualcomm or price penalty decision. Isn't this clear and easy to see even by engineers?

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Post ID: @1cga+XfGHFVY

https://www.cnet.com/news/qualcomm-expert-tasneem-chipty-rebuts-ftcs-claims-that-chipmaker-hurt-competitors-intel-samsung-mediatek-huawei/

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Post ID: @1nyw+XfGHFVY

apple gonna lose. truth will set you free Mav!

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Post ID: @aak+XfGHFVY

The OP is missing two key points in the case:

1) the lack of comparable modems (historically) is EVIDENCE of anti-trust, monopolistic actions. A highly lucrative market with no meaningful competition ??

2) Q PAID Apple (by way of kickbacks) to denigrate the evolving alternatives and also pan WiMax. Solid anti-competitive actions.

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Post ID: @hot+XfGHFVY

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