DariusIII
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- 08.12.2006
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- CPU & Cooler
- AMD Ryzen 9900X + Scythe Fuma 3
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- Gigabyte X870E Aorus Elite Wifi7
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- 64GB G.Skill Trident Z5 RGB
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- PowerColor Hellhound RX 9070XT
- Storage
- WD Black SN850X 2TB, WD Black SN850X 1TB NVME, 2x Samsung 870 EVO 4TB SSD
- PSU
- FSP Hydro PTM X Pro 1000W
- Kućište
- Cooler Master TD500L
- Monitor
- LG UltraGear 27" x 2
- Miš & tastatura
- Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro + Razer Basilisk V2
- Pristup internetu
- ADSL
Upravo sam naleteo na sledeću vest:
Nokia suing Apple over the iPhone
The alleged patent infringement applies to all iPhones since its 2007 launch
Nokia, the world's biggest mobile phone maker, has said that it is suing its US rival Apple for infringing patents on mobile phone technology for the iPhone.
Nokia said it had not been compensated for its technology, and accused Apple of "trying to get a free ride on the back of Nokia's innovation".
The ten alleged patent infringements involve wireless data, speech coding, security, and encryption.
Apple's shares dipped after news of the action broke.
The breaches applied to all models of the iPhone since its launch on 2007, Nokia added.
'Basic principle'
Finland's Nokia said that it had agreements with about 40 firms - including most mobile phone handset makers - allowing them to use the firm's technology, but that Apple had not signed an agreement.
"The basic principle in the mobile industry is that those companies who contribute in technology development to establish standards create intellectual property, which others then need to compensate for," said Ilkka Rahnasto, Vice President, Legal & Intellectual Property at Nokia.
"Apple is also expected to follow this principle."
He added that during the last two decades, Nokia had invested approximately 40bn euros (£36.2bn; $60bn) on research and development.
Earlier this month, Nokia posted its first quarterly loss in a decade amid falling sales.
Analysts said that the poor results had come partly as customers turned from Nokia models to the iPhone and RIM's Blackberry.
Meanwhile, Apple reported profits of $1.67bn (£1bn) in the three months to 26 September - partly due to a 7% growth in iPhone sales.