Google's Ambition by Eric Law In this week's video I will talk about Google's Ambition, how they acquired Motorola Mobility for a total of 12.5 Billion Dollars.
Your presentation definitely improved since last week so keep up the good
work. Great job looking at the patent war from Google's point of view.
Apple vs. Google! Apple vs. Google! that is the prize fight that we are all
watching at this point. Nice job on explaining reasoning behind Google's
actions in this war and how other companies (namely Apple) are effected by
them.
I think Google's strategy will be radically different than those of Apple
and Microsoft. Google will likely use its patent portfolio to play defense
and to allocate its time and effort towards more innovation, as opposed to
playing offense in a courtroom.
I agree with jaykpat. Google bought Motorola's patent portfolio for defense
purpose. This deal will protect android ecosystem, encourage fast
innovation, and consumers will get better phones at lower prices.
I think that Google should just use those patents to collect royalties.
Aside from the overstatement on the number of patents that MMI owns, I
think you touched on some important topics.
I agree with many of your points. It's an interesting approach to look at
the Motorola acquisition as a way for Google to catch up in terms of
financial performance to players like Apple.
@jrivasucb MMI does in fact have a staggering 17,000 patents. You can do a
quick search on google for that.
2009 UCSF PoS Lecture Series, organized by Vuk Uskokovic - Part 5: Jeffrey Schwartz & Henry Stapp 2
From January to June 2009, Vuk Uskokovic organized a series of unconventional academic lectures at University of California, San Francisco, sponsored by the ...
Innovating Energy Access for Remote Areas | Interview with Juana Ramirez, ADA
2009 UCSF PoS Lecture Series, organized by Vuk Uskokovic - Part 5: Jeffrey Schwartz & Henry Stapp 4
From January to June 2009, Vuk Uskokovic organized a series of unconventional academic lectures at University of California, San Francisco, sponsored by the ...
Thank you Henry Stapp, thank you Jeffrey Schwartz, I love Jeffrey Schwartz
passion.
Sather Tower's Carillon
I took this video last year when I went to the top of Sather Tower on the UC Berkeley campus (I'm a student there :D) There are no good views of the bay area ...
A Short History of the Company: From Joint-Stock to Today's Corporate Giant (2003)
Adrian Wooldridge is the Management Editor and 'Schumpeter' columnist for The Economist magazine. Until July 2009 he was The Economist's Washington ...
All modern "trade" agreements include an ISDS (investor-state dispute
settlement) provision that allows corporations to challenge all existing
laws and regulations that are obstructing maximum profits. States cannot
sue corporations. No appeals process exists. 3 corporate lawyers have the
final say. Why no COOL (country of origin labels) in the US now. US tax
dollars paying to compensate for imagined lost profits while we had them.
Time to wake up. TPP, TTIP, TiSA all coming up soon.
That affirms the statement attributed to the "corpwatch" webpage.
Radiation from nuclear power and depleated uranium weapons is an
equal-opportunity death machine. The nuclear industry uses state power to
silence anyone who tries to warn the public. But the wealthy who love to
fly in airplanes are dropping dead at am alarming rate. And the real truth
is that radiation cannot be stopped. It will find its way into the tissue
of every person on every continent, rich or poor.
I like that they didn't bother to say that globalization of the industrial
corporate model brought us Hitler's war machine, agent orange, and the
monopolies that created both thrive today enjoying "Too Big To Jail" status
because they own the intelligence apparatus that installs our blackmailed
government officials. From Flint Michigan to The BP oil rigs in the Gulf of
Mexico... glyphosate cancer for all.