Microsoft has filed a lawsuit against the Barnes & Noble over the company’s Android based e-book reader, claiming that it infri­nges Microsoft patents. The company is also naming Foxconn and Inventec, who manufacture the Nook reader for the retailer.

According to Microsoft, the patents at issue covers a range of functionality embodied in Android devices that are essential to the user experience, including natural ways of interacting with devices by tabbing through various screens to find the information they need, surfing the Web more quickly and interacting with documents and e-books.

 

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Taiwan’s Foxconn Group is planning to build a plant in Brazil as the company is willing to manufacture Apple products.

Foxconn already has two assembly lines in Jundiai, Brazil that presently manufacture products for HP and Sony.

Foxconn has reportedly commissioned studies to analyze the feasibility of adding a third line at its plant, to manufacture products for Apple.

 

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­Apple has published its annual Supplier Responsibility report and has revealed that some of its suppliers had hired under-age workers and that others had exposed staff to dangerous chemicals. The report stated that all the suppliers were being audited to ensure no further incidents.

Last year, company stated that it completed first-time audits of 97 facilities and comprehensive repeat audits of 30 facilities, for a total of 288 supplier facilities audited since 2007.

In the company’s audits of 127 facilities, the company found that ten Chinese factories that had hired workers under the age of 16 years, the minimum age for employment in China. Across nine of these facilities, a total of 49 workers were hired before reaching the legal age. The company put this down to poor administration at the factories and states that they have implemented upgrades. The remaining factory had hired 42 under-age workers, and Apple decided to cancel its contract with that unnamed supplier.

The company’s largest supplier, Foxconn, which came under a lot of attention following a spate of suicides, was commended for the actions it took to deal with the issue. Although the decision to put anti-suicide nets , its tied-accommodation was welcomed by the company. They have been criticized by human rights activists as they aimed at cutting down on deaths without dealing with the cause of suicide attempts.

In another issue, the company found that 137 workers at the Suzhou facility of Wintek, had suffered adverse health effects following exposure to n-hexane, a chemical in cleaning agents used in some manufacturing processes. Following changes to prevent a recurrence of the incidents, Apple added that it plans to keep a close eye on the company during 2011. Wintek also supplies components to Nokia.

In total, Apple’s audits of 127 facilities during 2010 revealed 37 violations of its core supplier contracts: 18 facilities where workers had paid excessive recruitment fees, which is generally considered to be involuntary labor; ten facilities where underage workers had been hired; two instances of worker endangerment; four facilities where records were falsified; one case of bribery; and one case of coaching workers on how to answer auditors’ questions.

Chinese technology sites have published what seems to be the hardware configuration of Apple’s newest version of the iPhone. Some people are also calling it the iPhone HD.

According to the sites that revealed the news, the new iPhone will have a new generation of touch display, a professional IPS / FSS LCD screen with a resolution of 960 x 640 pixels (the actual iPhone models have a resolution of 320—480 pixels) that will be much thinner (about 33% thinner), allowing a much longer battery life, and a much more improved screen display that will improve the user experience.

Battery life will also be improved by the 19% larger battery that will be included in the new version of iPhone. Also, the device’s performance will be improved by the 512 megabytes of Samsung memory used in order to make the device work smoother.

Other sources say that the new iPhone 4 will have a new camera with HD recording capability and flash (not Adobe Flash), a frontal camera that will allow video conferencing and probably over 32Gb of storage space.

The source at Foxconn said that the company is going to manufacture 24 million units of the next generation iPhone. The hardware configuration is not confirmed how could it be only hours before Steve Jobs’ keynote at the WWDC 2010.

Editor’s note: Please wait for final confirmations until later this evening.

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www.WirelessFederation.com/news: Smartphone based on Google’s Android operating system has been developed by telecom operator Orange and it is planning to launch it in Spain, the UK, Poland and Romania from April 12.

The handset will not be offered in France initially. The “Boston” touch-screen handset will be available with a subscription plan of EUR 1. The move has been decided keeping in mind that the Orange is working hard to accelerate the adoption of the mobile internet and puts its mobile apps into more users’ hands.

The handset is produced in China and costs just EUR 120 to manufacture. The amount is EUR 120 to manufacture and to add icing on the cake, the operating system is free. Taiwainese-owned Foxconn might be the partner of Orange. Foxconn also produces the iPhone and some BlackBerry models.

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The Indian mobile market is on a high growth trajectory. I was in two different Indian cities last week – part of my five day-five city tour across Asia. While in India, I was told by my colleagues that the mobile telephone network connectivity has become so bad that connections are dropping often.

I was in the Malaysian capital of Kuala Lumpur for a day and during a discussion with friends, a Malaysian expert told me that the prospects of two major Malaysian telecom operators look good owing to their investments in India.

I was in a lunch meeting with a senior executive of a major Southeast airline the week before in Singapore – the most talked about topic over lunch was the advent of Indian aviation players creating ripples in the market. I was floored by the experience flying Jet Airways during the Chennai to Kuala Lumpur flight. My colleagues ask me to hold judgement till I get to fly Kingfisher. I am not someone to be impressed so easily – my frequent flyer statement shows several hundred thousand miles with none other than Singapore Airlines. It is very likely aviation shall do an impressive repeat of the success of the mobile industry.

Let’s look at the telecom scene: Southeast Asian telecom operators have made significant investments in Indian mobile service players. These players took a financial stake in established growing businesses. Maxis, Malaysia’s largest telecom player has invested in Aircel, and Singtel has invested in Bharti, the largest mobile player in India. As these players slug it out, Maxis reports that Aircel added 588,000 new subscribers during the second quarter alone, which is more than double Maxis’ achievement in Malaysia. The other Malaysian player, Telekom Malaysia, is investing in the third Indian Indian player – Spice communications. All the three are aggressively expanding their Indian opoerations.

Monthy subscriptions inching towards six million additions per month – 5.9 million of them – are new mobile subscriptions, making India’s net addition the highest in the world, overtaking that of China – though the penetration levels may be lower. This New York Times article shows that china added 5.1 million subscribers, so the Indian run rate is 15% ahead of that of china.

Look at the growth – around 125 million subscribers have signed for mobile services in less than 15 years since the services were launched in the country. India believes that six or seven million monthy new subscriber additions are possible. Clearly liberalization and foreign investments all are helping the country in a big way – after all, the Indian mobile subscription rates are amongst the lowest in the world and handset makers like Nokia are helping the cause by coming in with low cost models and in the process helping India create high tech manufacturing clusters in places like Sriperumpudur, India’s likely answer to Shenzhen.

Three types of operators are alreasy investing here: the OEMs like Nokia, Motorola, the EMSs like Flextronics and Foxconn, and the component manufacturers who work with the OEM and EMS players. Dell is the recent addition planning to set up a manufacturing shop there. It’s the most talked about thing in the tech sector today – some of the largest telecom-related opportunties for system integrators/service players are available in India.

Clearly opening up of the economy and the progress of the technology world is helping India advance faster and better – the only eyesore is the Indian infrastructure. I do not want to write about my experience in the Bangalore airport clearing baggage or the time that it took for me to clear immigration on my return via Chennai.

Source- http://blogcritics.org

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