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#21 | ||
Blu-ray Champion
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Last edited by WickyWoo; 06-12-2008 at 04:47 PM. |
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#22 |
Senior Member
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Vizio LCD TV maker Amtran says it paid royalties for MPEG-2 patents
Latest news Max Wang, Taipei; Rodney Chan, DIGITIMES [Wednesday 11 June 2008] Taiwan-based Amtran Technology, a major shareholder of US-based LCD TV vendor Vizio and also a major manufacturer for the brand, has stressed that it has already paid the royalties for MPEG-2 video compression technology. Amtran was commenting on a lawsuit filed in the US against Vizio by competitors who accused it of violating MPEG-2 patents. Amtran said for MPEG-2 it already paid the licensing fees to MPEG LA between the end of 2007 and the beginning of 2008. But the company said it had yet to learn the details of the lawsuit, and therefore would not further comment on the issue. The lawsuit would not affect Vizio's TV sales in the US in the short term, it added. Amtran has reported NT$5.34 billion (US$157.788 million) in May sales, up 5.5% from the same month in 2007. |
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#24 |
Power Member
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Anyone looking to defend China and India in this thread ought to think about the fortune we have to spend for filling our gas tanks now.
A few fat cats in the United States made themselves even more filthy rich by outsourcing any industry they could to China and India. The results are the economies in both countries have over-heated with growth. The governments of both countries heavily subsidize commodities like gasoline. So demand there is soaring for cheap fuel while we get hit with ever rising prices for food, utilities, fuel and many more things. That's the price we're now having to pay for all those cheap products at Wal-Mart. |
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#25 |
Senior Member
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Not just a loophole. Patent holders are only entitled to collect royalties once on each component, and companies which subsequently use the parts in other products aren't liable for any additional royalties. This is known as patent exhaustion, and has been the rule in patent law for over 150 years. The plaintiffs, who are looking to lose more ground to Vizio in 2008, know this and brought suit anyway...
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#26 | |
Special Member
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#27 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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If they can't produce the cancelled checks, along with books that match the shipped unit figures (which undoubtedly don't match from the public records), theyr'e screwed Read "major shareholder" as "owner" BTW. |
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#28 | |
Senior Member
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#29 |
Blu-ray Champion
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Waiting for a ruling in that case certainly would explain why it took so long, but it still doesn't change what almost certainly went on. These are standard business practices for the last 10 years by these companies, nothing has changed
Why do you think they don't have a repair network up and running? Because they don't plan on being around long enough to make it worthwhile to train outside techs. |
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#30 | |
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#31 |
Blu-ray Count
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JJs dos centavos:
Vizio made decent lower-tier televisions that never gave me any problems when I had it or the other people I know who had it. Then again, they weren't what you would call videophiles, and although I know better now - they are content with their purchase. Costco still sells them by the truckload. But then again, this has always been my stubborn standpoint with Vizio, despite what I've heard on these forums against them. They are acceptable enough for everyday people who want an HDTV and don't have the budget. Now, as far as this lawsuit is concerned - if this is indeed the case, then it is a sad thing to bring Vizio down. But if it is a ploy as someone else said - to bring the "little guy" down - that's a different matter. Profit is profit - I particularly liked the comparison to automobile manufacturers and the whole Honda vs. Lexus thing. You pay for what you get. |
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#32 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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Let me put it this way For Christmas, I got a defective Pioneer upconverter DVD player. My brother did not keep the receipt for the item, and couldn't remember when he bought it, so BB wouldn't take a return for an exchange. So it just took them 2 months to send the part out, and pay the tech $30 to install it. If they'd just shipped me the stupid board I could have put it in for free in 10 minutes and saved them a lot of money. It costs $20 to even ship a DVD player back and forth via FedEx. How is that more efficient, especially with shipping prices only likely to go up? Ubiquitous equipment like HDTVs are quickly becoming is simply too large of a volume for them to handle. While the installed base is small, it is cheaper to use their own hub places rather than mass tech training, but 2-3 years from now? Not so much |
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#33 | |
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its fairly unrealistic for a 1st world nation to criticize other countries for industrializing as they grow. |
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#34 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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Also I doubt those offshore deposits would even make a dent on US oil consumption, let alone world wide. Oil is sold on an open market. |
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#35 |
Special Member
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Well, this is starting to get off-topic, but since I'm very much affected by the current situation (as I live in the US and have a car), I had to chime in: I think it's insane to disallow oil drilling off of our coasts for US based companies, but other nations are free to do so (China and Cuba in the Gulf, for example), and are signing long-term leases for the rights! So, let me get this straight, we'll refuse to drill oil off of our coasts (and I think you're wrong about putting a dent in our consumption, as the Gulf has arguably the largest concentration of accessible oil in the world), but we'll let a third party do it, then pay 10x as much to buy the oil back from them that they're drilling from off of our own coasts? How does that make sense? How is that environmentally solid policy? At least if we're doing the drilling, we get the benefit of lower cost fuel, as well as being able to regulate how the oil is taken from the Earth. I'd really like someone to explain this one to me, because I just don't get it...
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#37 | |
Active Member
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#38 | |
Senior Member
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The local tech fee is a very tiny part of the cost of operating a local repair shop. For a leading HDTV seller in the U.S., like Vizio, it is far more efficient to run large central facilities and use high volume/discount cost courier services. Henry Ford would agree.
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#39 | |
Senior Member
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![]() I don't buy Behringer products for the same reason - stealing ideas (well, complete designs in Behringer's case) is morally wrong. |
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