New computers you purchase come with Windows 10
licenses the manufacturer paid for.
Not exact matches
More significantly, the new plan calls for
pay TV providers and programmers to create a standard
license for getting cable apps onto third - party devices, instead of allowing them to negotiate different terms with each device
manufacturer.
Qualcomm on Wednesday filed suit against Apple device
manufacturers Foxconn, Pegatron, Wistron and Compal Electronics for refusing to
pay their
licensing fees.
Manufacturers have to
pay a
license fee for the Android Market and for most of Google's Apps.
Microsoft «uses these patents to demand that every
manufacturer of an Android - based mobile device take a
license from Microsoft and
pay exorbitant
licensing fees,» Barnes & Noble said in a trade commission filing.
This is the price of obtaining all of those
licenses from car
manufacturers to use their pretty cars without making them look bad, but in a way it's the gamer that
pays for this corporate vanity.
Players making the jump to the latest consoles can import previously acquired DLC tracks across systems from the same
manufacturer, from Xbox 360 to Xbox One and PlayStation 3 to PlayStation 4 without having to repurchase content or
pay additional
licensing costs.
EA won't
pay arms
manufacturers for
licensed digital replicas of their guns and war paraphernalia in its action games - Battlefield 4 - this year.
Android doesn't cost
manufacturers a thing, so why bother with
paying for a Windows Mobile
license.
Manufacturers can make cheap Windows laptops like the HP Stream and
pay Microsoft nothing — that's $ 0 — for the Windows
license.
(Chrome OS is free for Chromebook
manufacturers too, sort of — most hardware makers
pay Microsoft
licensing fees when they use Chrome OS.)
It's not really free because the
manufacturer has to
pay for the Windows
license.
When you buy a new PC, the
manufacturer will still have to
pay MIcrosoft for that
license.
A DAP bearing this logo doesn't necessarily mean that it outperforms than one without the logo, it just means that its
manufacturer has
paid a
licensing fee and has agreed to follow a set of product guidelines and performance requirements.
Unlike Dolby Vision, though, HDR10 + is an open standard, meaning TV
manufacturers don't have to
pay to
license it.
Yes, Apple has created yet another proprietary connector for which
manufacturers will have to
pay license fees, but the upside is that they will derive power from the iOS device itself (the iPad Pro is undoubtedly the first of many Apple products to use the Smart Connector), and obtain much greater data bandwidth through a hard connection.
The reason might be that the
manufacturer doesn't usually
pay the
license fee required to use the technology, which has now apparently changed with the Mi A1.
Apple says that Qualcomm's demands for
licensing the patent are unreasonable, and has instructed its
manufacturers (like Foxconn) not to
pay royalties to Qualcomm for the time being.