Exactly! By all means hammer them on the 148 and 336. Justice is done and is seen to be done. If it's in their best interests to take the other components of the portfolio at the same time, as part of a settlement, that's fine. But the other components are not part of the litigation and there's no reason why the defendants should be forced to accept them if they don't want them.
They are currently not being sued for all the patents within the Portfolio, only the '148 and '336.
The jury decides amount of damages on the two patents, not the portfolio. What happens then?
They decide on PAST use, the Defendants will still be liable for current/future use and will need the MMP Portfolio license to avoid further litigation. As I tried to explain, this is about infringement of the '148/'336 not future licenses, which will have to be determined subsequently. If you want to use the '148/'336 in future, you need a MMP Portfolio license. A jury is unable to determine future use as a non-infringing chip could be available tomorrow or they might stop manufacturing products currently infringing.
Paying a fine for speeding doesn't give one the right to speed subsequently.
Be well