Blackberries....

campsean said:
I am a blackberry user and I am not concerned about the impending shutdown of RIM on Feb 24th. I doubt this shutdown will happen because there was a similar situation in England and Germany two - three weeks ago. Those countries' judges have declared those patents invalid and threw out the case, but giving the patent company the right to appeal the decison. This is what I'm expecting to happen on Feb 24th - judge will declare the NTP patents invalid and throw out the case and give NTP the right to appeal the decision.

If you are considering getting a blackberry - by all means go ahead and get one. It has been the best thing I've invested in. E-mail delivery is VERY reliable and almost instantous.

More info to back my post up.... and looks like Good Company is gonna be in the same shoes RIM is in now. Damn.. this is gonna be the year of patent infrigements!

http://www.pcworld.com/resource/article/0,aid,124607,pg,1,RSS,RSS,00.asp
RIM Wins Patent Case in the U.K.

BlackBerry maker still faces an ongoing lawsuit in the U.S.

Nancy Gohring, IDG News Service
Friday, February 03, 2006


Research In Motion (RIM), the maker of the BlackBerry, has won two patent-related lawsuits in Europe against InPro Licensing SARL, a Luxembourg patent holding company.

The English High Court in the U.K. ruled that InPro's U.K. patent is invalid, RIM reported this week. InPro had argued that certain BlackBerry products infringed on its patent.

RIM said on Monday that it had won a similar case involving InPro in Germany. The Federal Patent Court in Munich ruled that InPro's patent claims are invalid, RIM said.

InPro can appeal both decisions.

InPro had previously charged RIM with patent infringement in the U.S., but lost that case too.

Across the Pond

Despite the reprieve in Europe, RIM is still in the midst of a long-running battle in the U.S. with NTP, a company that has won a court case charging RIM with patent infringement.

In an unusual twist in that case, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) subsequently ruled that the relevant NTP patents are invalid. It's unclear how that ruling, which can still be appealed by NTP, will affect the ruling against RIM in court.

It is also not yet clear how the USPTO's decision will affect a request by NTP that RIM be ordered to shut down its service in the U.S. A judge will issue his decision on that request in late February.

RIM isn't the only mobile e-mail provider doing battle over intellectual property claims, highlighting the competitiveness of the market. Visto, which makes software that lets mobile operators offer push e-mail, has filed a lawsuit charging Microsoft with infringing on three Visto patents in its Windows Mobile 5.0 product.

Visto is also suing Good Technology, a developer of mobile e-mail products for the enterprise, for patent infringement.
 
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