Tag Archive for Apple

Top Patent Troll Reloads

Top Patent Troll ReloadsIt’s been a good year for patent trolls, and now the biggest patent troll of them all wants to keep the party going. Jeff John Roberts at GigaOM reports that Intellectual Ventures (IV) has acquired more than 200 new patents. The acquisitions will help IV extend its legal tentacles in fields like wireless infrastructure and cloud computing.

Patent troll aquires more patentsGigaOM explains that IV’s peculiar brand of innovation involves acquiring old patents and using them to arm thousands of shell companies, whose sole business is to extract licensing fees from productive businesses.

News of IV’s restocked war chest, which Reuters says is partially funded by Microsoft (MSFT) and Sony (SNE) comes after earlier reports that initial investors, including Apple (AAPL) and Intel (INTC) declined to take part in IV’s newest trolling fund. According to the report, by the law firm Richardson Oliver and spotted by IAM, the fund is on track since IV purchased 16 percent of all available patent packages in the first half of 2014. A chart by the firm suggests it paid $1-$2 million in most cases; here’s a partial look:

The chart shows six patents related to the cloud computing industry, which has so far escaped the rampant patent trolling that has plagued mobile phone and app developers. The author speculates cloud computing could now be prime picking for IV in the coming year.

IV is well-positioned to exploit the patents thanks to Senate Democrats, who in May killed a bipartisan Patent reform bill that would have undercut many of the economic incentives for patent trolling according to Mr. Roberts. IV has also been active on the lobbying front, filing to start a PAC this year and donating sums of money to Senator Dick Durbin (D-Il), who is closely allied to the trial lawyer lobby that reportedly helped to derail reform.

corrupt politicansGigaOM believes darker clouds could be looming for IV. They cite growing public skepticism towards patent trolls, who now account for 67 percent of all new lawsuits. The trolls have received harsh treatment from the likes of NPR and the New York Times, while the Supreme Court’s repeated criticism of slip-shod patents may finally be making it harder for companies to abuse them.

Meanwhile, respected tech figures like Marco Arment have lashed out at IV’s business model as “cowardly” while inventors like Tesla’s Elon Musk have questioned the value of patents to begin with.

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Uh oh, the world’s biggest patent troll has restocked its weapons chest — and it looks like their next target will be cloud computing.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

70s Glitch Could Hit Every Computer On Earth

70s Glitch Could Hit Every Computer On The PlanetRebecca Borison at the BusinessInsider asks who remembers the 1999 panic about the Y2K crisis. In 1999, Y2K looked as if it might derail modern life when computers because the glitch would reset computers to Jan 1. 1900, rather than Jan. 1, 2000, because computers only used two digits to represent a year in their internal clocks.

déjà vu all over againNow it déjà vu all over again, BI reports there’s a new, even bigger global software coding fiasco looming.  A huge amount of computer software could fail around the year 2038 because of issues with the way the code that runs them measures time.

Once again, just like with Y2K every single piece of software and computer code on the planet must now be checked and updated again. That is not a trivial task according to the author. In 2000, we bypassed the Y2K problem by recoding the software explains Ms. Borison. All the software — a fantastically laborious retrospective global software patch.

Disruption to the tech industry

Y2K problemAlthough Y2K was not a disaster, it was a massive disruption to the tech industry at the time. Virtually every company on the planet running any type of software had to find their specific Y2K issue and hire someone to fix it. Ultimately, Y2K caused ordinary people very few problems — but that’s only because there was a huge expenditure of time and resources within the tech business.

The 2038 problem will affect software that uses what’s called a signed 32-bit integer for storing time. The problem arises because 32-bit software can only measure a maximum value of 2,147,483,647 seconds. This is the biggest number you can represent using a 32-bit system.

time is represented as a signed 32-bit integerWhen a bunch of engineers developed the first UNIX computer operating system in the 1970s, they arbitrarily decided that time would be represented as a signed 32-bit integer (or number), and be measured as the number of milliseconds since 12:00:00 a.m. on January 1, 1970.

Glitch says it’s 1970 again

On January 19, 2038 — 2,147,483,647 seconds after January 1, 1970 — these computer programs will exceed the maximum value of time expressible by a 32-bit system using a base 2 binary counting system, and any software that hasn’t been fixed will then wrap back around to zero, thinking that it’s 1970 again.

UNIX time coding has since been incorporated widely into any software or hardware system that needs to measure time.

BI spoke with Jonathan Smith, a Computer and Information Science professor at the University of Pennsylvania for confirmation. The professor confirmed the Year 2038 is a real problem that will affect a specific subset of software that counts on a clock progressing positively. He elaborated:

Most UNIX-based systems use a 32-bit clock that starts at the arbitrary date of 1/1/1970, so adding 68 years gives you a risk of overflow at 2038 … Timers could stop working, scheduled reminders might not occur (e.g., calendar appointments), scheduled updates or backups might not occur, billing intervals might not be calculated correctly

The article concludes that we all need just to switch to higher bit values like 64 bits, which will give a higher maximum. In the last few years, more personal computers have made this shift, especially companies that have already needed to project time past 2038, like banks that need to deal with 30-year mortgages.

64 bitsApple (AAPL) claims that the iPhone 5S is the first 64-bit smartphone. But the 2038 problem applies to both hardware and software, so even if the 5S uses 64 bits, an alarm clock app on the phone needs to be updated as well. (If it’s using a 32-bit system in 2038 it will wake you up in 1970, so to speak.) So the issue is more of a logistical problem than a technical one.

HowStuffWorks reports that some platforms have different dooms-days.

  • IBM (IBM) PC hardware suffers from the Year 2116 problem. For a PC the beginning of time starts at January 1, 1980, and increments by seconds in an unsigned 32-bit integer in a way like UNIX time. By 2116, the integer overflows.
  • Hardware and softwareMicrosoft (MSFT) Windows NT uses a 64-bit integer to track time. However, it uses 100 nanoseconds as its increment and the beginning of time is January 1, 1601, so NT suffers from the Year 2184 problem.
  • On this page, Apple states that the Mac is okay out to the year 29,940!

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The tech industry’s response to Y2K suggests that they will mostly ignore the 2038 issue until the very last minute when it becomes to ignore.  Another example of the pace of global software updates is that a majority of ATM cash machines were still running Windows XP, and thus vulnerable to hackers even though Microsoft discontinued the product in 2007.

Dont worryFortunately, the 2038 problem is somewhat easier to fix than the Y2K problem. Well-written programs can simply be recompiled with a new version of the C-library that uses 8-byte values for the storage format. This is possible because the C-library encapsulates the whole time activity with its own time types and functions (unlike most mainframe programs, which did not standardize their date formats or calculations). So the Year 2038 problem should not be nearly as hard to fix as the Y2K problem was.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Wearable Tech Takes Off

Wearable Tech Takes OffWith the recent release of the Google (GOOGGlass, interest in wearable technology has been on the rise. The impending Apple (AAPLiWatch counter offering will inevitably drive the hype-cycle for wearable technology into hyper-drive. FierceMobileIT cites forecasts from several vendors that predict the wearable tech market will explode.

Wearable enthusiasm

Google GlassesVisiongain believes that over the next five years, the wearable technology market will reach $4.6 billion, with “explosive growth and high adoption rates.”  The wearable technology market includes smartwatches, tech clothing, augmented reality glasses, mobile health devices, and fitness/well-being monitors. Visiongain says:

Due to these devices becoming increasingly cheap to manufacture OEMs are now devising ways to apply this technology to target the consumer market. With virtually limitless applications to a number of verticals, the wearable technology market represents a huge value proposition to all ecosystem members, from manufacturers to app developers and service providers.

Vital jacketIHS Research and Juniper Research share Visiongain’s optimism about wearable technology. IHS predicts that between 2012 and 2017 10 million smart glasses will ship, with a majority of units shipped in 2016. IHS optimistically predicts that shipments of smart glasses will increase by 250% per year.

Juniper Research predicts that wearable devices would be increasingly used in the enterprise. Enterprise wearables include terminal devices, scanners, display devices, and tracking devices. They can also be used for logistics, factory management, and production houses. Juniper projects that overall sales of mobile, wearable devices, and smart glasses will reach 70 million units by 2017.

Wearables will cut into tablets

IDC says wearable computing will cut into tablet sales. They believe wearable devices like Google Glass and smartwatches could hamper tablet sales. Shoppers may choose to spend their money on wearable technology instead of tablets.

Business Insider - Wearable shipment estimates

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Smartwatches augmented reality glasses and even smart contact lenses will save time and increase productivity. These technologies will hit the bottom line of enterprises that choose to embrace this new technology.

Once widespread consumer adoption takes place, the enterprise is never far behind – whether it’s ready or not. Remember how quickly Blackberry’s were tossed aside in favor of more consumer-friendly smartphones? BYOD is evidence that staff members will take technology into their own hands if their employer isn’t providing what they want. 

Companies need to start thinking about policies on existing wearable technology. For instance, many companies who have regulations on using cellphones while driving can expand these to include wearable technology, which will come in handy since wearables could prove distracting.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Hidden costs of BYOD

Hidden costs of BYODFierceMobileIT points out research from Visage Mobile has identified even more hidden costs in an informative infographic based on data collected between January and April 2013 from 180 companies.

These hidden costs include high roaming charges, as well as downloads of premium text services and sexting apps by employees. Employees download $13,640 worth of unapproved apps, ringtones, and premium services every month. As a result, 15 percent of a company’s phone bill has nothing to do with business, according to the research.

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Ummm – Acceptable use policy? A deduct from their phone stipend?

Hidden costs of BYOD

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Rockstars Team Up Against Google

Rockstars Team Up Against GoogleTo usurp Mark Twain, the reports of Nortel‘s demise are greatly exaggerated. GigaOm reports that the defunct Canadian telco giant has found an afterlife as part of a patent trolling operation that struck Android phone makers and is now targeting network and cable operators, including Google, with lawsuits in Texas and Delaware.

afterlife of a patent trolling operationJeff John Roberts writes that Nortel’s second act as the walking dead is taking place thanks to “Rockstar Consortium,” a group formed by Microsoft (MSFT), Apple (AAPL), Blackberry (BBRY), Sony (SNE), Ericsson AB (ERIC)EMC (EMC) and other Google (GOOG) rivals, which bought bankrupt Nortel’s patent portfolio in 2011 for $4.5 billion. (rb- I covered the sale of Nortel’s IP here)

Nortel was the source of many of the most important innovations in history in the field of telecommunications and networking,” says a new Rockstar lawsuit filed in the seemingly pro-troll U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas that accuses Time Warner Cable (TWC) of violating six patents, including US Patent 6128649, which was issued in the year 2000 and describes a method to show multiple screens in a video conference the article summarizes.

Rockstar Consortium formed by Microsoft, Apple, Blackberry, Sony, Ericsson, EMC

The complaint doesn’t say how exactly Time Warner Cable is infringing the old Nortel patents, but only notes that “TWC operates, sells and offers to sell video, high-speed data and voice services over its broadband cable systems throughout the United States.” The author says Rockstar, which is suing through a subsidiary called Constellation, also complains that the cable company walked away from its licensing demands in 2012.

GigaOm notes a second lawsuit, filed in Delaware by Rockstar under the alias “Bockstar” makes a series of broad-based allegations against Cisco (CSCO) that claim the company is violating six other old Nortel patents, including this one from 1998, related to routers and switches.

costs are passed on to customersLike all patent trolling, the author says that has nothing to do with innovation, but it certainly will lead to higher cable bills as Time Warner will have to spend millions on lawyers to fight the suit or else pay expensive license fees for old patents from a dead company; either way, the costs are passed on to customers.

Joe Mullin of Ars Technica noted when Rockstar sued the phone companies, “it’s patent trolling gone corporate.” And there’s no sign of where this will stop. Apple and Microsoft are sitting on thousands of patents that date from an era when the Patent Office would grant a patent on nearly anything, and it looks like they’re going to use them to sue every industry they can think of.

dysfunctional US CongressThe totally dysfunctional US Congress tried to take on patent trolling but caved into lobbyists. Microsoft has already succeeded in stripping out a part of the law that would have made it easier to challenge bad patents. This means the best hope for a return to patent sanity may lie with the Supreme Court, which agreed to consider what type of software patents should be granted in the first place.

GigaOm cites CBC reports that Ottawa, Nortel’s hometown has been transformed from a one-time innovation hotbed into a tech necropolis where once-proud engineers are paid to pick apart other people’s inventions in search of new patent violations that they can pass on their American masters.

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I have covered the patent trolling mayhem in the mobile market for a while and this seems to be more of the same. Innovation is dead in the mobile market and the only way these firms can compete is in the courthouse.

In addition to their choice of venue in the pro-troll Texas court, further evidence that Microsoft and Apple have created a patent troll can be found in the fact that Rockstar has filed suit against the leading Android phone producers:

  1. Samsung Electronics Co. (005930) (#1 Android OEM in U.S. sales),
  2. LG Electronics (LGLD) (#2),
  3. ZTE (763) (#4),
  4. Huawei (002502) (#6) and
  5. HTC (2498) (#7).

In addition, DailyTech notes that Rockstar member Sony is a minor Android OEM.  If somehow Microsoft and Apple are able to troll other Android OEMs to death, Sony could see gains in market share, as the only OEM who doesn’t have to pay direct licensing fees to Microsoft/Apple (Sony also notably has preexisting licensing deals with Microsoft and Apple).

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.