Nokia (Espoo, Finland) becomes the sixteenth company to take a license of the technology according to Alliacense (Cupertino, Calif.) the group responsible for managing the patents on behalf of the TPL Group and its partner Patriot Scientific Corp. (San Diego, Calif.).
Nokia is not saying at this stage on exactly how it intends to use the technology.
TPL formed an alliance with Patriot Scientific Corp. in 2005 and pooled processor technology patents together in the "Moore Microprocessor Patent (MMP)" portfolio, named after Charles H. Moore, chief technology officer of TPL Group, who is credited with inventing the Forth software programming language and is known for his work in the 1980s on stack-based microprocessors.
The portfolio includes seven U.S. patents, as well as their European and Japanese counterparts, which Patriot and The TPL Group have said they consider fundamental to the design of modern microprocessors, microcontrollers and system-on-chip devices.
Three of the patents are: U.S. Patent 5,809,336, which covers the separate clocking of a CPU and its I/O; U.S. Patent 6,598,148, which covers the use of multiple cores and embedded memory; and U.S. Patent 5,784,584, which covers fetching multiple instructions.
Patriot and TPL have licensed a number of companies to use the MMP portfolio, most noticeably leading processor vendors Intel Corp. and Advanced Micro Devices Inc.
Since January 2006, HP, Casio, Fujitsu, Sony, Nikon, Seiko Epson, Pentax, Olympus, Kenwood, Agilent, Lexmark, Schneider Electric, NEC Corporation, Funai Electric, SanDisk and Sharp Corporation have all purchased MMP Portfolio licenses. The licensing program rewards early movers in specific industry segments by subjecting subsequent licensees in those same segments to progressively higher royalty rates.
Patriot and the TPL Group have been generally tight lipped about the financial terms of MMP portfolio licensing agreements. However, in a regulatory filing made last June, Patriot revealed that Intel Corp. paid $10 million in a one off payment to license the portfolio, while its smaller rival, Advanced Micro Devices Inc., paid $2.95 million.
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