Tag Archives: Motorola

Motorola XT1058 for AT&T hits the FCC, could be XFON related

Motorola XT1508 for AT&T hits the FCC, could be XFON related

We’ve been waiting to see what Motorola would produce now that it’s a part of Google, and one of its first phones to bring the stock Android 4.2 experience may have just been revealed in an FCC filing. The XT1058 sports AT&T compatible LTE bands and NFC, and its model number matches some of the rumors mentioned for phones codenamed Yeti, Ghost or Sasquatch. More concrete ties to the original X Phone rumors are pictures of an AT&T-bound “XFON” posted by @evleaks last week, and the XT912 Vietnamese site Tinhte.vn got its hands on in March. When will we find out what’s hiding behind door number 1? Google I/O is next week and it seems (to us) like the perfect time for a big reveal, while we wait you can hit the source link to dig through the documents for any more information.

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Source: FCC

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Mystery Motorola Phone Passes Through The FCC, Looks Just Like Early X Phone Leaks

fcc-xfonHere’s a little noodle-scratcher for you fellow mobile hardware nerds to ponder this evening. This little Motorola Mobility beauty, brandishing the model number XT1058, recently passed through the FCC and left the customary paper trail in its wake. Alright, maybe calling it a beauty is a bit of a stretch, but here’s the kicker: the rudimentary sketch included with the listing looks bears a striking resemblance to a slew of earlier leaked images that purportedly showed off Motorola’s secretive X Phone. Consider the alignment of those three circular elements on the back — those bits match up rather nicely with the camera, LED flash, and Motorola logo/button as seen in images of an unreleased smartphone originally circulated by the team at Tinhte.vn. Even the seemingly curved section along the top edge where the device’s headphone jack lives and the placement of what appears to be the sleep/wake button are spot-on when compared to those leaked photos. Having a hard time visualizing all that? Here’s a side by side view to give you a sense of the similarities: Of course, this doesn’t bring us any closer to figuring out what the device is actually capable of — all the FCC’s listing reveals is that this thing sports radios for Bluetooth 4.0, 802.11ac and NFC. It could be that this is the first regulatory appearance of the so-called XFON, a device that noted gadget leaker @EvLeaks posted photos of earlier this month. After all, the XT1058 has been found to support AT&T’s particular LTE bands, and the XFON’s IMEI label clearly calls it out as an AT&T device. At this point no one (save for the lucky chump who snapped those photos in the first place) can definitively say whether or not the XFON and this curious AT&T device are the same, but it’s distinctly possible. There are a few cosmetic similarities between the two — namely the Motorola logo stamped on the top left corner, the shape of the speaker grille, and the placement of the indicator LED and the front-facing camera. Don’t pay too much attention to the chunky chassis though, as it’s not uncommon for non-final hardware to undergo testing clad in patently ugly shells. You may recall that BlackBerry’s Dev Alpha and Beta devices lived in similarly unflattering boxes before the innards were officially unveiled at a series of simultaneous launch events back in January. For all of
TechCrunch

EC says Motorola broke antitrust rules, abused its patent position

EC says Motorola broke antitrust rules, abused its patent position

It was almost a year ago to the day that the European Commission began investigating Motorola over reported abuse of its standard-essential patents (SEPs), and now the regulators have a little more to say on the matter. The Commission has issued Motorola Mobility a Statement of Objections, which doesn’t mean any judgment has been reached, but lets the company know its preliminary view, and it ain’t good news. According to these initial findings, Motorola wanting an injunction against Apple in Germany based on some of its GPRS-related SEPs — the particular legal encounter that was the catalyst for a complaint by Cupertino and ultimately, the EC’s investigation — “amounts to an abuse of a dominant position prohibited by EU antitrust rules.” Motorola originally said it would license these patents under FRAND terms when they became standard-essential, which Apple was happy to pay for. However, the company pursued an injunction nonetheless.

The Commission’s statement goes on to say that while injunctions can be necessary in certain disputes, where there is potential for an agreement under FRAND terms, companies with bulging SEP portfolios should not be allowed to request injunctions “in order to distort licensing negotiations and impose unjustified licensing terms on patent licensees.” Joaquín Almunia, the Commission Vice President who’s responsible for competition policy, echoed what we’ve heard from other important folks entrenched in the never-ending patent battlefield (such as Judge Koh), saying: “I think that companies should spend their time innovating and competing on the merits of the products they offer — not misusing their intellectual property rights to hold up competitors to the detriment of innovation and consumer choice.” So, what happens next? Motorola will first have its right to address the statement before the EC makes a final decision, but it’s looking like a fine is headed Motorola’s way. Hopefully, this case will also have a wider impact on patent cases of the future, so companies will spend more time making shiny things for us, and less on courtroom squabbles.

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Via: Reuters

Source: European Commission

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Motorola mystery phone appears with non-Nexus fixings

This afternoon a device has been leaked from the likes of Motorola and AT&T, bringing with it a mixed vision of the future for the hardware manufacturer as it grows ever closer to a pure Google Android experience. Google has owned Motorola for some time now, and as the company gets closer to the end

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Motorola X Phone rumors, benchmarks march on

Newly uncovered Motorola XT1055 is the latest in string of rumors associated with the fabled Motorola X Phone. [Read more]

    




CNET News

Court sides with Microsoft over Motorola patents used in Xbox

Judge determines Motorola is entitled to $ 1.8 million in royalty rates for patents used in Xbox — not the $ 4 billion it had sought. [Read more]

    




CNET News

Microsoft prevails in Xbox patent rift with Motorola Mobility

A U.S. judge ruled Thursday 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.
Computerworld News

Judge to Motorola: You’re asking too much for patents

The wrangling over patents has shifted its focus to Motorola today, which took a blow in court over standards-essential patents and how much the company is entitled to over them. Specifically, the now Google-owned Motorola Mobility sought billions from Microsoft over its use of the patents, but a judge has put the kibosh on that,

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Washington court rules Motorola can get millions, not billions, from Microsoft for its patents

Washington court rules Motorola can get millions, not billions, from Microsoft for its patents

Among the many patent cases currently ongoing between Motorola and Microsoft is one in US District Court in the state of Washington concerning standards-essential WiFi and h.264 patents. AllThingsD reports that while Motorola was requesting billions in royalties for the technology it owns, Judge James Robart — who invalidated a number of its patent claims a few months ago — ruled it’s entitled to around $ 2 million per year. The reason given? There’s so many patents in play, the judge determined that the amount Motorola sought would cost more than the Xbox 360 they’re being implemented in, and also that it hadn’t proven its patents were more valuable than those of other companies included in the same pool. All 207 pages of the decision are available beyond the source link if need more info on the hows and whys of today’s decision.

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Source: AllThingsD

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Motorola Loses ITC Case Against Against Apple for Proximity Sensor Patents

New submitter Rideak writes with this excerpt from CNet about an ITC ruling against Motorola in their case against Apple for violating a few of their proximity sensor patents: “The U.S. International Trade Commission today ended Motorola’s case against Apple, which accused the iPhone and Mac maker of patent infringement. In a ruling (PDF), the ITC said that Apple was not violating Motorola’s U.S. patent covering proximity sensors, which the commission called ‘obvious.’ It was the last of six patents Motorola aimed at Apple as part of an October 2010 complaint.”

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ITC rejects Motorola touchscreen patent complaint against Apple

The U.S. International Trade Commission has found no evidence that Apple infringed on a Motorola Mobility patent covering a touchscreen function.
Computerworld News

Justice Dept. approves Google’s $2.3B sale of Motorola Home

Arris Group buys set-top box maker for $ 2.35 billion, relieving the Web giant of 7,000 employees and a series of patent lawsuits. [Read more]

    




CNET News

Method Found To Unlock Qualcomm Based Motorola Phones

FlatEric521 writes “In a blog post over at Azimuth Security, Dan Rosenberg explains how certain models of Motorola Android phones based on the Qualcomm MSM8960 chipset (including the Atrix HD, Razr HD, and Razr M) can be permanently unlocked. He writes, ‘I will present my findings, which include details of how to exploit a vulnerability in the Motorola TrustZone kernel to permanently unlock the bootloaders on these phones.’” It’s a long read, but interesting.

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Developers finally unlocked bootloaders for many Motorola phones

The time has come. Motorola owners can rejoice because developers have finally unlocked the bootloaders to a good number of Motorola’s devices. So far, it’s been confirmed that the DROID RAZR HD, DROID RAZR MAXX HD, DROID RAZR M, and Atrix HD are all able to have their bootloaders unlocked. It was Dan Rosenberg who

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ITC initial determination finds Microsoft doesn’t infringe Motorola peer-to-peer wireless patent

ITC initial determination finds Microsoft doesn't infringe Motorola peertopeer wireless patent

Microsoft and Motorola’s spat in the International Trade Commission started way back in 2010, but it looks like the case may be finally drawing to a conclusion after an initial ruling in Moto’s favor was remanded for a second look. Reuters reports that on remand, the presiding administrative law judge reversed his stance in a new initial determination, clearing Microsoft of the remaining infringement charge for patent number 6,069,896 on wireless peer-to-peer technology. In response to this bit of good news, Microsoft VP Corporate VP and deputy general counsel had this to say:

We are pleased with the Administrative Law Judge’s finding that Microsoft did not violate Motorola’s patent and are confident that this determination will be affirmed by the Commission.

Back in October of last year, Motorola dropped the two WiFi-related patents it had asserted against Microsoft, and in January of 2013 it dropped both of its H.264 related patents from the ITC proceeding. With this latest ruling, it looks like Microsoft will escape from the ITC scott free, though it’s not out of the woods yet, as the final call from the full commission won’t occur until July. And, of course, Motorola can always take things to the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit should it choose to do so. Isn’t the system of endless appeals that is the United States judicial system wonderful?

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Via: Reuters

Source: ITC Notice [PDF]

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Unannounced Motorola Android phone surfaces, isn’t the fabled ‘X phone’ (video)

Unannounced Motorola Android phone surfaces, isn't the fabled 'X phone' video

The fine folks at Tinhte have gotten their mitts on a Motorola-made Android phone that hasn’t made its official debut. Right out of the gate, the outlet notes that it’s not the rumored “X phone” since it’s missing a large, stunning screen that would rival other flagship gear, but the specs still give it a fair amount of horsepower. Behind the device’s roughly 4-inch 720p screen hide a Snapdragon S4 Pro (or better), an Adreno 320 GPU, 2GB of RAM and a 2,000mAh battery. On the outside, the smartphone sports a curved back reminiscent of the HTC One, a black finish and a thin bezel framing its display. Tinhte reports that the handset carries a XT912A model number, so we reckon it could be a cousin of the Droid RAZR, which is labeled as the XT912. Hit the jump for a video tour of the device, or click the source link for a full photo gallery.

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Source: Tinhte (1, translated), (2, YouTube)

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Google Will Cut 1,200 More Jobs At Motorola Mobility

alphadogg writes “Motorola Mobility is cutting 1,200 staff, in addition to a reduction of 4,000 staff it announced in August, to focus on high-end devices. ‘These cuts are a continuation of the reductions we announced last summer,’ said Motorola. ‘It’s obviously very hard for the employees concerned, and we are committed to helping them through this difficult transition.’ Motorola’s mobile business has been overwhelmed in the smartphone market by larger players such as Samsung Electronics, Apple, Sony, Huawei Technologies and ZTE.”

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Motorola Mobility to axe 10% of its workforce

It wasn’t all that long ago that Google purchased Motorola Mobility getting itself a hardware arm. Everyone assumed when Google made the purchase that Motorola would be the company producing the Nexus devices from then on out. Google promised that it wouldn’t give Motorola Mobility any sort of favoritism when it came to Android. According

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Prominent Apple fellow goes to work for Motorola

Guy Kawasaki, venture capitalist and former Apple chief evangelist, announced this week that he has taken on advisory work for Motorola Mobility – which is owned by rival Google.
Computerworld News

ITC to review Apple victory in Motorola patent case

Federal agency will take a second look at a judge’s decision to invalidate a Motorola patent, a ruling that cleared Apple of infringement claims. [Read more]


CNET News

Judge Invalidates 13 Motorola Patent Claims Against Microsoft

walterbyrd writes “Microsoft scored a victory against Google-owned Motorola Mobility this week after a judge scrapped 13 of the latter party’s patent claims in a years-long dispute over H.264-related royalties. Waged in US and German courts, the battle involves three patents (7,310,374, 7,310,375, and 7,310,376) that Motorola licenses to Microsoft for several products, including the Xbox 360, Windows and Windows Phone. PJ is commenting on the case over at Groklaw.net.”

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13 Motorola patents against Microsoft invalidated

In what is a large blow to Google, a federal judge has invalidated 13 Motorola patent claims against Microsoft in what has been an on-going legal spat between the two companies. The claims concern a total of three patents that deal with a video codec standard, with Microsoft having had requested their invalidation based on

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Judge invalidates 13 Motorola patent claims against Microsoft

Judge invalidates 13 Motorola patent claims against Microsoft

Google’s Motorola branch isn’t having much success lately in getting patent claims to stick against Microsoft. A few months after the company dropped some ITC claims, the judge in a Seattle contract lawsuit has granted Microsoft’s motion to invalidate 13 of Motorola’s claims across three standards-based patents, all of them linked to H.264 video coding. The individual claims aren’t well-defined enough to hold, Judge James Robart says. The ruling takes most of the thunder out of components in the lawsuit that aren’t directly related to the contract, and could lead to lighter penalties against Microsoft should Google and Motorola win — not that Google has much sway when it’s prevented from seeking bans over standards-based patents.

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Via: Electronista

Source: FOSS Patents

Engadget

Judge invalidates 13 Motorola Mobility patent claims in Microsoft case

A U.S. district court judge has ruled that 13 Motorola Mobility patent claims related to digital video are invalid in a patent licensing case brought by Microsoft.
Computerworld News

Tablet Thursday: Get a Motorola Xoom 2 + 4G LTE for $219 shipped

Known stateside as the Motorola Droid Xyboard, this feature-packed tablet is available in your choice of size: 8.2 or 10.1. [Read more]


CNET News

Cisco, Motorola patent racketeering claims rejected

Trio of networking companies had sued a patent troll that was demanding Wi-Fi licensing fees from bakeries, hotels, cafes, and other businesses. [Read more]


CNET News

Motorola apparently seeking product manager for ‘X-Phone’

The Google-owned company appears to be moving forward with its next-generation smartphone. [Read more]


CNET News

What New Ideas Does Google Have Brewing At Motorola?

My Android phone just went splat. Google’s CEO says its Motorola division is working on that.

I was texting last weekend while stopped at a red light on my bicycle, and as the light turned green, I carelessly put the phone in my pocket and pedaled off.  Next thing I knew, my Android phone, a year-old Samsung Galaxy Nexus, had hit the pavement. The phone functions, but now the screen is webbed with cracks (ok, I may have deserved that). 







New on MIT Technology Review

Google slapped by FTC, forced to license Motorola patents

Google will stop abusing patents it purchased from Motorola, U.S. antitrust regulators announced Thursday, following a 20-month investigation into Google’s business practices.


FOX News

UK Court Invalidates Motorola Message Syncing Patents

Dupple writes with news of another tech patent thrown out for obviousness. From the article: “On Friday, the High Court of London issued a ruling that said that one of Motorola’s patents covering technology to synchronize messages across several devices should be invalidated. Originally, the patent covered the synching of messages across multiple pagers, but recently Motorola has used the patent in lawsuits against Apple and Microsoft for using similar message-syncing services in iCloud and on the Xbox, respectively. The presiding Judge Richard Arnold declared Motorola’s patent invalid and said it should be revoked because the patent (which has a priority date from 1995, but was issued in 2002) contained technology that ‘was obvious to experts in the field at the time.’”

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Google reportedly poaches key Samsung marketing VP for Motorola

Google reportedly snags key Samsung marketing VP for Motorola

Google may be doing more to boost Motorola’s presence than whipping up a new device strategy, if rumors are true. AllThingsD claims that Google has poached Samsung’s American VP for strategic marketing, Brian Wallace, for a roughly equivalent role at Motorola. The move would not only give Motorola a high-profile executive who’s had stints at companies like RIM, but one who’s not afraid of taking the competition head-on: Samsung’s TV ads poking fun at iPhone launch queues appeared under Wallace’s tenure. We’ve asked Google, Motorola and Samsung whether or not the shift is real; Motorola won’t comment in either direction, and we haven’t heard from the remaining two. If there’s any truth to the story, Motorola might have a stronger carrier-independent sales pitch than the occasional dystopic TV spot.

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Source: AllThingsD

Engadget

Google X Phone flagshipp tipped with Motorola in tow

As Google continues it work with now-owned Motorola to bring about a more vanilla (read: Google-only Android) universe, it’s become apparent this afternoon that they may be going full-tilt with a smartphone code-named “X Phone”. This tip comes from the Wall Street Journal where they’ve got an internal leakster saying the marquee handset will be

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Google to unload Motorola set-top box unit with $2.35B sale to Arris

Google plans to sell the TV set-top box business of its Motorola Mobility subsidiary to Arris Group, a broadband device vendor, for $ 2.35 billion.
Computerworld News

Google Sweetened Motorola Deal With Arris By Promising To Cap Liability In TiVo’s Billion Dollar+ Patent Claim

google logoDuring the analyst conference call discussing Arris’ just-announced acquisition of Motorola Home, one of the big topics (to Arris CEO Bob Stanzione’s apparent exasperation) was TiVo’s lawsuit against Motorola Mobility and its owner Google.

In October, TiVo claimed that Motorola is responsible for “massive production of infringing DVRs” that “dwarfs the numbers of accused products at issue in TiVo’s previous cases.” The filing also states, “TiVo’s damages claim is likely to run into the billions of dollars,” and it says that TiVo will try to get the courts to stop Motorola from selling the allegedly infringing products.
TechCrunch

ITC judge sides with Apple in latest Motorola patent spat

Apple’s iPhone has been cleared of infringing on one of Motorola’s patents, the International Trade Commission said today. The ruling is not final. [Read more]


CNET News

Motorola ATRIX HD Jelly Bean update available now

We learned back in October what devices Motorola was and wasn’t going to support with an Android 4.1 Jelly Bean update. The ATRIX HD was one of the handsets that was promised such an update, and now AT&T has announced that it’s finally coming to ATRIX HD owners and should be rolling out now. Starting

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Motorola to pull out of South Korea in 2013, shed around 500 jobs

Motorola to pull out of South Korea in 2013, shed around 500 jobs

As part of its Google-led overhaul to become a lean and mean smartphone outfit, Motorola is pulling out of its South Korean operations from next year. Around 540 jobs will be lost, with 60-or-so staffers being offered a chance to relocate to the company’s R&D departments elsewhere. It’s not the first high-profile departure from the country this year, after HTC found it difficult to compete with the local superpowers — and we can’t imagine it’ll be the last.

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Via: The Next Web

Source: ETNews (Translated)

Engadget

Motorola DROID RAZR HD, MAXX HD to get Jelly Bean next week

This isn’t the first time we’re hearing about a Jelly Bean update for the DROID RAZR HD series, but Verizon has announced today that Motorola‘s newest RAZR devices will receive Android 4.1 Jelly Bean starting next week. The rollout will happen in phases, so if you don’t see your update the same time as someone

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Federal Judge blocks Xbox ban, grants motion to dismiss Motorola request for injunctive relief

Federal Judge blocks Xbox ban, grants motion to dismiss Motorola injunction

Motorola’s hopes of enforcing a German-won sales injunction against the Xbox 360, Windows 7 and other products have yet again been dashed — a Federal judge has taken Microsoft’s side. Judge James L. Robart granted a motion declaring that Motorola Mobility isn’t entitled to injunctive relief, effectively blocking bans based on the firm’s H.264 streaming and (previously dropped) WiFi patent complaints. The court had been sitting on the motion for nearly a year, but for Microsoft, the final word is worth the wait: Motorola “has not shown it has suffered an irreparable injury or that remedies available at law are inadequate to compensate for its injury,” the court said, noting that Microsoft “will pay royalties under any license agreement from the time of infringement within the statute of limitations.” Basically, Motorola will recoup all the scratch it’s complaining it lost anyway, so no harm, no foul. Just a giant legal headache.

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Via: FOSS Patents, Seattle Times

Source: Court Order (PDF)

Engadget

Microsoft, Motorola finish arguments in patent trial

The two tech titans argued over how much the software giant should pay the wireless technology company to use its patents, which are used in Windows and the Xbox console. [Read more]


CNET News

Motorola announces Test Drive early access software updates

Sometimes the wait for an update to come rolling out for your smartphone is tiresome, especially as the rest of the world seemingly enjoys the latest and greatest software offerings. Earlier today, Motorola announced that it will begin offering users a trial run option for new software, getting updates out faster than before. Users can

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SlashGear

Federal judge in Wisconsin dismisses Apple vs. Motorola patent case

A highly anticipated patent infringement case between Apple and Motorola Mobility was dismissed by a federal court Monday, hours before the trial was due to begin.
Computerworld News

Apple offers up to $1 per device for Motorola Mobility patents

Apple has offered to pay Google's Motorola Mobility unit up to one dollar per device for a license to its patents covering cellular and Wi-Fi technologies.
Computerworld News

Motorola scales back ITC case against Xbox, drops WiFi patent complaints

Motorola scales back ITC case against Xbox, drops WiFi patent complaint

Since taking over Motorola Mobility, Google has started to rein in some of the manufacturer’s legal adventures. First, it struck a licensing deal with Apple in Germany, then it withdrew an ITC complaint against the company in early October. Now Microsoft is benefiting from its new, seemingly less lawsuit-happy adversary. Moto has decided to pull its WiFi-related patent claims from a complaint against the Xbox 360. That still leaves its H.264 patents on the docket, though, we wouldn’t be surprised to see the case disappear completely before the two companies go to trial in December. Microsoft claims it’s entitled to a reciprocal license from Google due to an existing agreement between Mountain View and MPEG LA. German courts have already ruled that Motorola’s claims regarding its H.264 patents are strong enough to issue injunctions against the Xbox 360 and Windows 7, however the company has been unable to enforce those sales bans due to ongoing investigations in the US.

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Motorola scales back ITC case against Xbox, drops WiFi patent complaints originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 26 Oct 2012 09:17:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget

Motorola HC1: Google Goggles for the enterprise

Motorola Solutions has unveiled a head-mounted, voice-controlled computer that's targeted at the military and other industries where workers need hands-free access to information.
Computerworld News

Motorola lists phones that won’t get Jelly Bean, offers $100 credit to buy a phone that will

Motorola lists phones that won't get Jelly Bean, offers $  100 credit to buy a phone that will

Back in September, Motorola Mobility announced that some of its handsets from 2011 and later wouldn’t be making the jump to Jelly Bean. In an effort to smooth things over with exiled customers, the company pledged that it would offer a $ 100 rebate to those who trade up to a select Motorola smartphone. Today, the Google-owned Android maker has released a list detailing which phones qualify for this promotion. If you’re among the many who purchased a Droid 3, Droid X2 and Photon 4G, it looks like an official update to Android 4.1 is out of the question. It should be noted that this offer doesn’t affect your wireless contract’s terms and conditions (read: ETF may still apply). However, if you’re just aching to pick up a Motorola phone that released in 2012, then why not score a $ 100 credit for your troubles? Move past the break to see which other devices made didn’t make the cut.

Continue reading Motorola lists phones that won’t get Jelly Bean, offers $ 100 credit to buy a phone that will

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Motorola lists phones that won’t get Jelly Bean, offers $ 100 credit to buy a phone that will originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 19 Oct 2012 20:26:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget

Motorola lists phones that won’t get updates to Jelly Bean

Back when Motorola announced the DROID RAZR HD and the DROID RAZR M, it made a commitment to upgrading the majority of its phones to Android 4.1 Jelly Bean. When it made this commitment, the company said that it would give users who didn’t get updated $ 100. Naturally, no one was expecting Motorola to upgrade

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Motorola DROID RAZR HD Review

With Verizon’s next in an ever-expanding line of RAZR devices here with the Motorola DROID RAZR HD we’re getting essentially the same experience as we did with the RAZR M, except this time it’s quite a bit larger. With a 4.7 inch Super AMOLED display on top of a dual-core processor from Qualcomm, it’s not

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Motorola Electrify 2 Review (US Cellular)

Motorola‘s first Electrify was a handset that we couldn’t help but love. Now Motorola is back with the Electrify 2 on US Cellular, and though its a great looking phone that has some respectable specifications, there are just a few things that come off feeling a little lackluster. The question is: are those underwhelming features

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SlashGear

Microsoft Sues Motorola Over Mapping Patents



jfruh writes “The mobile patent wars continue, with two of the world’s biggest tech companies about to blunder into direct conflict. Microsoft holds a number of patents that it claims give it rights over mobile map applications that overlay data from multiple databases (map info from one database and store location info from another, for instance). Many Android vendors already pay Redmond licensing fees for their mapping apps; now Redmond is going to court in Germany to sue one of the holdouts: Motorola Mobility, which is of course owned by Google.”

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