Re: The message should be clear./edited
in response to
by
posted on
Jul 04, 2014 09:45AM
e.Digital was selected by Intel to design and prototype a number of portable digital voice recorders utilizing advanced speech-to-text and text-to-speech technologies. Intel plans to sub-license the reference design created by e.Digital to Intel's OEM customers, referring them back to e.Digital for licensing and any additional design and/or manufacturing work required. e.Digital has also filed a number of trademark applications with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office; We have received notification of allowance from the United States Patent Office for use: MicroOS TM, FlashBack(R), Hold That Thought(R), Fumble Free(R), SoundClip(R), Smart Song Selection(tm), MicroCAM TM - Micro Compressed Audio Manager, AMIS TM - Audio Manager Interface and TWIRL TM - Two-Way Infrared Link as registered trade names
emit, this is how I see it....Voice Times was a standards initiative...meaning participants are going to standardize, in some fashion, their tech. The most important part of e.Digital is I/O...utilized for VTT-TTV, transmitting data to memory...etc....or any type of data transmission.
Not mentioned in the Intel / e.Digital relationship... as referenced in the Voice Times Standards initiative, is data transmission considerations for mobile issues.
After seeing e.Digital recently come up with multiple patented issues regarding mobile issues...as mentioned in the Voice Times standards initiative
RE: NUNCHI
SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR MANAGING MOBILE COMMUNICATIONS
e.Digital, IMO, was not willing to just produce some VTT / TTV platforms with Intel ...that Intel would refer OEM's back to e.Digital.... in exchange for whatever the Voice Times initiative wanted of e.Digital.
e.Digital was not willing to standardize its I/O methods....and now we have NUNCHI…had they given anything to Voice Times…we would not have NUNCHI.
Intel wasn’t giving anything to e.Digital but a referral…thanks, but no thanks.
doni