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Vincent Padois, head tutor at the Pierre and Marie Curie University who teaches robotics and is babysitting the Paris ICub, makes a demonstration with ICub robot, a ?hybrid embodied cognitive system for a humanoid robot" about 1 metre (3.2 feet) high, at the Pierre and Marie Curie University in Paris September 4, 2009. Six versions of ICub exist in laboratories across Europe, where scientists are painstakingly tweaking its electronic brain to make it capable of learning, just like a human child and hoping it will learn how to adapt its behaviour to changing circumstances, offering new insights into the development of human consciousness.   REUTERS/Philippe Wojazer

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    Ericsson, STMicro merge wireless chips

    Wed Aug 20, 2008 5:42am EDT
    The Sony-Ericsson W980 walkman-phone mobile is displayed during the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, February 14, 2008. The Mobile World Congress will run from February 11 till 14. REUTERS/Albert Gea

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    PARIS/STOCKHOLM (Reuters) - Ericsson (ERICb.ST) and STMicroelectronics (STM.PA) have agreed to join their wireless chip and software businesses to create a joint venture that will supply four of the world's top five cell phone makers.

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    The new company, announced on Wednesday, will bring together the Mobile Platforms unit of Ericsson, the world's biggest mobile telecoms equipment maker, and ST-NXP wireless, the third-largest maker of wireless chips globally.

    With pro-forma 2007 revenues or $3.6 billion, the venture will present a tougher challenge to wireless chip market leader Qualcomm (QCOM.O) and number two Texas Instruments (TXN.N). Ericsson and ST-NXP Wireless already cooperate with one another.

    "This is an interesting merger in that the new company will be a supplier to all the big mobile companies except Motorola (MOT.N)," Redeye analyst Greger Johansson said.

    The venture will build on ST's recent acquisition of Dutch chipmaker NXP's wireless unit, while allowing Ericsson to focus more on its core telecoms infrastructure business after a series of profit warnings as it battles fierce price competition.

    "In a business where scale matters, the complementary product portfolios contributed by the parent companies will deliver significant scale and synergies," the two companies said in a joint statement.

    ST currently has Nokia (NOK1V.HE), Samsung (005930.KS) and Sony Ericsson -- Ericsson's cell phones venture with Sony (6758.T) -- as customers, while Ericsson has LG Electronics (066570.KS) and Sharp (6753.T) as well as Sony Ericsson.

    Without Sharp, those customers -- who also have other suppliers -- account for 80 percent of all handset shipments.

    The technologies of the new company will span second-generation, third-generation and future fourth-generation LTE mobile telecoms standards.

    Sweden's Ericsson will pay STMicro $700 million, further boosting the cash pile of the Franco-Italian chip maker, and will inject $400 million into the venture.

    Before the deal closes, STMicro will buy back the 20 percent that privately held NXP still owns of the ST-NXP venture.

    "Here they (Ericsson) are in an instant creating a business with a critical mass and a market leading position within mobile platforms and at the same time focusing on the core operations," Cheuvreux analyst David Hallden said.

    "This type of streamlining is of course positive and I don't think we should rule out that we will see more of this."

    Ericsson shares rose 0.6 percent to 65.90 Swedish crowns by 0923 GMT, while STMicro rose 2.2 percent to 8.28 euros.

    The new unit will be 50-50 owned and based in Geneva, where STMicro is headquartered. Ericsson Chief Executive Carl-Henric Svanberg will be chairman of the board and ST's CEO Carlo Bozotti will be vice-chairman.

    The new company will employ almost 8,000 people, about 5,000 from ST-NXP Wireless and roughly 3,000 from Ericsson.

    A news conference is planned in London at 1100 GMT.

    (Additional reporting by Victoria Klesty and Oskar von Bahr in Stockholm; Editing by Sue Thomas)



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