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Australian WiFi inventors win US legal battle
by Staff Writers
Sydney (AFP) April 1, 2012


Australian government science body CSIRO said Sunday it had won a multi-million-dollar legal settlement in the United States to license its patented technology that underpins the WiFi platform worldwide.

Scientists from the agency invented the wireless local area network (WLAN) technology that is the basis of the WiFi signal employed by computers, smartphones and other Internet-ready devices around the world.

The Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) patented the technology in the 1990s, and has been suing companies using it without a licence since 2005.

In 2009, CSIRO recouped Aus$205 million (US$212 million) after settling cases against 14 companies. The agency said it had now been awarded a further Aus$220 million after reaching agreements with 23 more firms.

Australian Minister for Science and Research Chris Evans said in a statement that it was an important battle to win.

"It was important that Australia protect its intellectual property, and that those major companies who are selling billions of devices pay for the technology that they were using," he said.

Nigel Poole, a senior executive at CSIRO, said the agency was delighted with the result.

"CSIRO's commercial and legal teams on both sides of the Pacific have worked very hard over the past several years to gain a reasonable return and I would like to pay particular tribute to them for their extraordinary efforts," he said.

"Of course, it was the inventors, led by Dr John O'Sullivan, whose brilliance in the 1990s made all this possible."

The invention came out of CSIRO's pioneering work in radioastronomy, with a team of its scientists cracking the problem of radio waves bouncing off surfaces indoors, causing an echo that distorts the signal.

They overcame it by building a fast chip that could transmit a signal while reducing the echo, beating many of the major communications companies around the world that were trying to solve the same issue.

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S. Korea's Hynix bids for Japan's Elpida
Seoul (AFP) March 30, 2012 - SK Hynix, the world's second largest microchip maker, said Friday it has submitted a preliminary bid for its struggling Japanese rival Elpida Memory.

SK Hynix said in a brief regulatory filing that a final decision on its bid would follow the completion of due diligence.

Elpida, which was once the world's third-largest maker of dynamic random access memory (DRAM) chips, filed for bankruptcy protection late February with crushing debts of $5.4 billion.

It was delisted from the Tokyo Stock Exchange Wednesday in the biggest corporate failure in Japan's manufacturing history.

The bid comes a month after South Korea's largest mobile carrier SK Telecom completed the acquisition of a controlling 21.1 percent stake Hynix for 3.34 trillion ($2.95 billion).

SK Telecom, which controls about half the country's mobile market, is a key affiliate of the SK Group, the country's third-largest conglomerate by assets.

The acquisition was part of SK Telecom's drive to diversify its business because of stagnant growth in the saturated domestic mobile market.

Creditors rescued Hynix by swapping their debt holdings into shares in 2001 and 2002.

Elpida was established in 1999 from a merger of the chip-making divisions of Japanese electronics giants NEC and Hitachi. But it fell victim to global market volatility when DRAM prices fell sharply in 2009, shrinking its earnings.



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Researchers discover a new path for light through metal
Washington DC (SPX) Mar 30, 2012
Helping bridge the gap between photonics and electronics, researchers from Purdue University have coaxed a thin film of titanium nitride into transporting plasmons, tiny electron excitations coupled to light that can direct and manipulate optical signals on the nanoscale. Titanium nitride's addition to the short list of surface-plasmon-supporting materials, formerly comprised only of metal ... read more


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