Qualcomm hits back at ARM over lawsuit
By Nick Flaherty, eeNews Europe (September 2, 2022)
Qualcomm is accusing its processor IP supplier ARM of attempting to interfere with its internal design operation after the takeover of startup Nuvia.
This marks a very different approach under new CEO Cristiano Amon (above), who took over from retiring CEO Steve Mollenkopf in June 2021. The two companies have had a longstanding partnership using architectural licenses to develop new versions of ARM cores for the SnapDragon range of chipsets.
The lawsuit in the US comes as Qualcomm is set to ship test chips of the Nuvia designs to partners for high performance notebook PCs running Windows on the ARM architecture.
To read the full article, click here
Related Semiconductor IP
- UCIe Chiplet PHY & Controller
- MIPI D-PHY1.2 CSI/DSI TX and RX
- Low-Power ISP
- eMMC/SD/SDIO Combo IP
- DP/eDP
Related News
- Arm, Qualcomm Case Goes to Court Over Arm Architecture Licenses
- Qualcomm Files Answer and Counterclaims to Apple Lawsuit
- Apple hits back at Imagination's 'misleading' statements, disputes timeline
- Arm Files Lawsuit Against Qualcomm and Nuvia for Breach of License Agreements and Trademark Infringement
Latest News
- Global Semiconductor Sales Increase 17.1% Year-to-Year in February
- Altera Starts Production Shipments of Industry’s Highest Memory Bandwidth FPGA
- Blumind reimagines AI processing with breakthrough analog chip
- 32-bit RISC-V processor based on two-dimensional semiconductors
- pSemi Files Patent Infringement Lawsuit Against Cirrus Logic and Lion Semiconductor