Support Our Site
Get Better Gear!
- Theodolite App for iOS is Breathtaking from Hunter Research and Technology, US$3.99 (Pro and HD versions)
- Akron’s TAB802 Table Mount For iPad Is Sturdy from Akron, US$99.95
- Dinosaurs Roar to Life on the iPad with Stephen Fry from M58959 Studios, US$14.95
- Poldera’s iKeep Holds Your iPhone Close from Poldera LLC, US$19.99
- Mediadevil’s Easyscreen Screen iPad Protector Is Unusual from Mediadevil, £16.97 (US$22.09)
Top 5 Free Apps
iTunes New Music Releases
Top 5 Paid Apps
Discover New Music
- Clap Your Hands Say Yeah
When I first got hooked to Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, the only place I could get their debut album, Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, was through the band's Web site. I listened to the two tracks a
- Nine Inch Nails
- For years I wanted to make music that sounded like something between Love and Rockets and Ministry. In 1989, Trent Reznor beat me to it with this genre-defining album, and it smacked me upside the hea
Live at the Magic Bag, Ferndale, MI
- Supersuckers
- Man, there's nothing like good, old fashioned, rock and roll... add a bit of industry resentment to that with a double-shot of cynicism, and you get one of the best "new" rock bands going. This album
- U2
- This record is perhaps U2's finest hour, yet it has been forgotten as a strange by-product of the ZooTV tour's overload, and is generally regarded by most fans as a poor effort. It is this sentiment t
- Barenaked Ladies
- These guys know how to put on a live show, and whomever recorded this knows how to capture one. Rock Spectacle is one of the warmest-sounding recordings I've ever heard, and totally fills a room at a
Reader Specials
Visit Deals On The Web for the best deals on all consumer electronics, iPods, and more!
News
Cisco CEO: iPhone Lawsuit a "Minor Skirmish"
Wednesday, January 24th, 2007 at 2:00 PM - by Jeff Gamet
Had Apple been willing to negotiate over the use of the term iPhone, the lawsuit over the name could have been avoided, according to Cisco CEO John Chambers. He describes the lawsuit itself as a "minor skirmish," reports the International Herald Tribune.
Cisco acquired the trademark to the iPhone name in 2000, but didn't use it until releasing its VoIP phone product recently. Apple announced its iPhone - a smartphone product that does not use VoIP technology - during Macworld Expo 2007 in early January.
Mr. Chambers said that his company told Apple for five years that it was willing to license the iPhone name. "All we ask is that people respect our trademarks and our intellectual property. We would have traded that for just interoperability," he said.
Apple contends that it does not need to license the iPhone name from Cisco, claiming that several products already use the moniker.
During Apple's first quarter financial report, COO Tim Cook commented "We think the Cisco trademark lawsuit is silly... There are already several companies that use the name iPhone for voice over IP products, and we believe that Cisco's U.S. trademark registration is tenuous at best. We are the first company to ever use the iPhone name for a cell phone, and if Cisco wants to challenge us, we're confident we'll prevail."
Recent Headlines
- AT&T Begins Process Toward Offering Shared Data
- OnLive Desktop: Windows & Office on Your iPad
- Battle Pocket Bulge With The Hint for iPhone
- Theodolite App for iOS is Breathtaking
- Forum Poll: Are You Planning on Buying a New iPad?
- Apple Highlights Siri in Two New iPhone 4S Ads
- Canaccord: Apple Claims 80% of Q4 Mobile Handset Profits















Post Your Comments