News

Arm and Qualcomm have both reportedly held discussions with Alphawave about a potential takeover. The two chip giants compete in several key markets, including designing ...
Qualcomm Inc. has launched a global antitrust campaign against Arm Holdings Plc as the two longtime business partners jockey for advantage in the computing semiconductor market.
Arm Holdings faces significant legal and regulatory risks, especially after losing a key lawsuit to Qualcomm, impacting its revenue and future growth prospects. Qualcomm's ongoing legal actions ...
In context: Qualcomm and Arm haven't been on good terms for a while. The UK designer tried and ultimately failed to force the US chipmaker to stop using its IP. In it's back-and-forth battle ...
As a result, Qualcomm has until April 29 to decide whether or not to make a formal offer. This comes amid reports that chip designer Arm (ARM) was also exploring a deal for Alphawave, though Arm has ...
British chip designer Arm Holdings explored acquiring semiconductor IP supplier Alphawave, but backed out due to discussions ...
Qualcomm (NASDAQ:QCOM) has brought its complaints against Arm Holdings (NASDAQ:ARM), which include allegations of antitrust practices, to regulatory bodies around the globe, according to Bloomberg.
The mud-slinging between ARM and Qualcomm is taking a new turn: Qualcomm is said to have filed antitrust-related complaints with the European Commission, the US Federal Trade Commission and the ...
suggesting that Arm’s customers—including Qualcomm with its Snapdragon PCs—could use the technology to eventually speed up PC graphics as well. Arm ASR, which was first announced a year ago ...
(Bloomberg) -- Qualcomm Inc. has launched a global antitrust campaign against Arm Holdings Plc as the two longtime business partners jockey for advantage in the computing semiconductor market.