A US judge has ruled that Sony did not infringe another company's patented technology with its PlayStation hardware, specifically regarding how consoles and consoles communicate.
As detailed by GamesIndustry.bizGenuine Enabling Technology (GET) first filed a complaint against Sony in 2017, alleging that the PlayStation manufacturer had infringed its '730 patent, titled “Method and apparatus for producing a combined data stream and retrieving the relevant user input stream.” Of which”. At least one input signal.'
Among the many claims raised in this case, the central point was how to connect PlayStation controllers and controllers. Now, as we all know, the DualSense communicates with the PS5 by sending a separate signal on a “slow-changing frequency” for the button inputs and another higher-frequency signal for the motion control input. GET's assertion was that no device would be able to receive both signals at the same time until the problem was resolved with the '730 patent.
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