Somebody at edig knows something
posted on
Sep 23, 2007 04:18AM
Somebody at edig knows something.
How many times over the years have we read such similar statements about buying activity? But this time it's about our guys in the trenches.
No, we won't see a bunch of new infringement targets over the battery life, because NOBODY is getting that kind of battery life for that kind of usage. Somebody at edig figured out how to extend the life of the battery significantly.
Is it a hardware change? A software change? Were we told it was a tweak to the MOS or are we speculating that?
In any case, edig has something new of great value, if there is a way to transfer use of this knowledge/technology to broader markets. If this method, whatever it is, for extending battery life can be applied to any portable device, from wristwatches to laptops and everything else, then if the sky was the limit for edig before, now we have no limits.
However, if the use of this knowledge/technology is limited to MOS use only, then the size and scope of the potential is much more limited, yet very, very significant. So while this will help to sell a LOT of MOS-enabled devices, I'm hoping this can be applied to things not needing MOS. Everybody will want it, everybody will need it in order to avoid being "so yesterday" in battery life.
Wolfy