Former Peanut Corporation of America CEO Stewart Parnell’s sentence is by far the harshest U.S. authorities have handed down in such cases. Emails revealed he and others knowingly sold tainted food.
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Former Peanut Corporation of America CEO Stewart Parnell’s sentence is by far the harshest U.S. authorities have handed down in such cases. Emails revealed he and others knowingly sold tainted food.
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The software that the EPA says causes Volkswagen cars to cheat official emissions tests exists in only one type of diesel engine, the carmaker says — and it has sold 11 million of them.
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Buydig via eBay offers the Sony 55" 4K Ultra HD LCD LED Smart Television, model no. XBR-55X800B, for an in-cart price of $899.99 with free shipping. That’s $100 under our August mention (which also included a $100 gift card) and the lowest total upfront price we’ve seen. (It’s a current low by $95.) It features a 3840×2160 native resolution, 120Hz refresh rate, edge-lit LED backlighting, WiFi content streaming (Netflix, Youtube, Hulu Plus, more), USB, and four HDMI inputs.
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The future of mass transit.
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We downloaded the models from GitHub, tweaked, printed, and gained access.
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Apple has won another small victory in its never-ending patent row with Samsung. The war that nobody asked for (and like most wars will have no winners, only losers) rages on with another appeals court decision. This one went in favor of Apple (as all but a few have), ruling that the company could force Samsung to stop using particular features on its cellphones and tablets. The ruling, while relatively narrow in scope, could still have significant consequences for Samsung and other device manufacturers.
The opinion from the court stated that "the right to exclude competitors from using one’s property rights is important." What makes this particularly notable is that in this case we’re talking about specific, individual features and technologies in a complex device. If the ruling stands that means that future devices from any company could be delayed or even removed from the market temporarily over seemingly minor features. For example, the ability to slide to unlock your phone.
Apple won an initial trial saying that Samsung had violated its patents on slide-to-unlock, autocorrect and quicklinks. But the judge at the time declined to force Samsung to change its designs and instead only awarded Cupertino monetary damages. That wasn’t enough for Apple which has continued to chase a full victory in the court system.
Of course, this is hardly the end of the fight. Samsung is appealing the decision, as well as the original decision finding that it had violated Apple’s patents. And right now the case is being sent back to a lower court to reconsider an injunction. However, the court systems appear to be tiring of these constant skirmishes as much as the public.
While in general the patent skirmishes between these two companies and its proxies have have died down, they haven’t ended completely. We can all hope that one day there will be an Apple / Samsung peace accord, but for now it seems the best case scenario is that the collateral damage doesn’t extend to consumer choice.
Filed under:
Cellphones, Apple, Samsung
Source:
Bloomberg
Tags: apple, breaking news, court, lawsuit, patent, PatentInfringement, samsung
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A new generation of meta-materials are emerging from a 17th century source.
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