. Space Industry and Business News .




.
TECH SPACE
Google chief defends Android in court
by Staff Writers
San Francisco (AFP) April 18, 2012


Google co-founder Larry Page stuck to his guns in a San Francisco court on Wednesday, testifying that the Internet giant did nothing wrong when it built the Android platform for mobile gadgets.

Page returned to the stand to field questions in a trial over accusations by business software titan Oracle that Google opted to infringe on Java program copyright and patents instead of licensing code from Sun Microsystems.

"We did nothing wrong," Page said as he dueled with an Oracle attorney. "We are very careful about what information we use and do not use."

Page, swapping standard Silicon Valley casual wear for a charcoal gray suit, light blue shirt and matching tie, kept his eyes toward the jury and smiled tightly as he testified.

Page held firm even when confronted with a key piece of evidence -- an email from Android team engineers saying that Google should license Java technology from Sun Microsystems for the Android project.

Google worked long and hard with Sun to work out a way to incorporate Java into a smartphone platform, but efforts failed and Google went its own way with Android, according to Page.

"I think Sun, and now Oracle, needed something that actually worked," Page said. "We had a closet full of Java phones that didn't work."

While Google would have preferred to collaborate with Sun, it invested in its own smartphone platform, according to the co-founder.

"Things like the iPhone didn't have Java at all and somehow magically got in consumers' hands," Page said. "I don't think it mattered."

The chiefs of Google and Oracle were opening witnesses this week in a patent case aimed at Android software used to power smartphones and tablet computers.

Oracle is accusing Google of infringing on Java computer programming language patents and copyrights Oracle obtained when it bought Java inventor Sun Microsystems in a $7.4 billion deal brokered in 2009.

Google has denied the claims and said it believes mobile phone makers and other users of its open-source Android operating system are entitled to use the Java technology in dispute.

Google unveiled the free Android operating system two years before Oracle bought Sun.

Protecting and profiting from Java software technology were prime reasons for Oracle's decision in 2009 to buy Sun, according to evidence presented so far at trial.

While testifying on Tuesday, Oracle chief Larry Ellison said that Oracle had considered buying Palm or Blackberry-maker Research In Motion to get into the smartphone market but didn't follow through.

Under questioning at trial, Oracle chief corporate architect Edward Screven said that Ellison and others at the company had considered using Java to build a smartphone platform but decided it wasn't feasible.

"Google's Android-Java clone had basically foreclosed the market from us," Screven said.

Screven went on to say that Sun had "lost its way" by the time Oracle bought it and that making money on Sun software available free was one of the ways to recoup the price paid by Oracle.

Part of the Google defense is that Oracle couldn't figure out a way into the smartphone market so is trying to leech off of Android's success by pressing claims regarding Java software that Sun made publicly available.

"If people could copy our software and create cheap knockoffs of our products, we wouldn't get paid for our engineering and wouldn't be able to invest what we invest," Ellison said during his testimony.

Ellison, an experienced courtroom witness, exuded confidence on the stand while Page seemed cautious and evasive, causing the judge to prompt him to directly answer yes-or-no questions.

The trial before US District Court Judge William Alsup could last as long as eight weeks if jurors find that Google did infringe on Oracle's intellectual property and a damages phase is needed.

Related Links
Space Technology News - Applications and Research




.
.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries






.

. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



TECH SPACE
Smartphones wallets going mainstream: survey
San Francisco (AFP) April 17, 2012
Using smartphones or tablets as digital "wallets" will be common within a decade, largely replacing cash and credit cards, according to a Pew Research survey released on Tuesday. Sixty-five percent of "technology stakeholders and critics" who responded to an opt-in poll by Pew Research and Elon University Imagining the Internet Center agreed that handheld gadgets would be a mainstream way to ... read more


TECH SPACE
Greenpeace says cloud computing 'dirty'

Bristol researchers solve 70-year-old mystery

U.S. Navy Awards Test Devices Contract for High-Cycle Fatigue Research

Microsoft-Amazon.com pressed for clean 'cloud'

TECH SPACE
Fourth Boeing-built WGS Satellite Accepted by USAF

Raytheon to Continue Supporting Coalition Forces' Information-Sharing Computer Network

Northrop Grumman Wins Contract for USAF Command and Control Modernization Program

TacSat-4 Enables Polar Region SatCom Experiment

TECH SPACE
SpaceX said eyeing Texas launch site

Lockheed Martin Names New Leader for Commercial Launch Services Business

A double arrival for Arianespace's next dual-payload Ariane 5 mission

Another weather satellite payload is readied for launch by Arianespace

TECH SPACE
Russia to Test Second Glonass-K Satellite in 2013

Lockheed Martin and Raytheon Complete Major GPS Integration Milestone

New Technology Tracks Sparrow Migration for First Time from California to Alaska

Galileo satellites intensify competition on the market of navigation

TECH SPACE
Boeing Celebrates 4,000th Next-Generation 737

Bats save energy by drawing in wings on upstroke

Air tax feud may affect climate change talks: US envoy

Dutch plan to gas troublesome airport geese

TECH SPACE
Dutch high-tech group ASML reports Q1 profits slump

UWM discovery advances graphene-based electronics

New X-ray technique reveals structure of printable electronics

Intel earnings beat expectations

TECH SPACE
NASA Satellite Movie Shows Great Plains Tornado Outbreak from Space

FCC drops Google 'Street View' investigation

Envisat services interrupted

ITT Exelis delivers imaging system for next-generation, high-resolution GeoEye-2 satellite

TECH SPACE
Nanosponges soak up oil again and again

Huge tyre fire causes Kuwait 'catastrophe'

Black carbon ranked number two climate pollutant by US EPA

35,000 gallons of prevention


Memory Foam Mattress Review

Newsletters :: SpaceDaily Express :: SpaceWar Express :: TerraDaily Express :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News

.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2012 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement