Qualcomm buys Palm patents from HP

Qualcomm says the purchase covers 1 400 US patents and about 1 000 more foreign patients for the company's mobile computing technology.

Qualcomm says the purchase covers 1 400 US patents and about 1 000 more foreign patients for the company's mobile computing technology.

Published Jan 24, 2014

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San Diego - Cellphone chip maker Qualcomm said on Thursday it has acquired patents once owned by smartphone maker Palm from Hewlett-Packard for an undisclosed amount.

Qualcomm says the purchase covers 1 400 US patents and about 1 000 more foreign patients for the company's mobile computing technology.

Hewlett-Packard paid $1-billion for Palm in 2010 as part of its first foray into tablet computers and smartphones, which ran on Palm's operating system.

The effort flopped and HP now sells tablets using Google’s Android and a recently introduced version of Microsoft.s Windows.

Palo Alto, California-based HP hasn't re-entered the smartphone market.

The Palm acquisition was one of three major purchases that have haunted HP, along with technology consulting service EDS and business software maker Autonomy. In November of 2012, Hewlett took an $8.8-billion writedown on the Autonomy acquisition, saying it was the victim of a multibillion-dollar fraud at the hands of the British company. Autonomy's former CEO said HP's allegations were false.

HP last year sold Palm's mobile operating system, webOS, to LG Electronics, which now implants the software in Internet-connected TVs.

Qualcomm didn't elaborate on its plans for the Palm patent portfolio. Big tech companies in recent years have been looking to expand their patent portfolios to help introduce new technology and protect themselves from lawsuits.

The San Diego company last year introduced a smartwatch called Toq to showcase the potential wearable devices that can connect to the Internet. - Sapa-AP

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