<P align=center><A href="http://www.binu2014.nl.ae/" target=_blank><FONT face="Arial Black" color=#3333ff size=4><STRONG>¿Â¶óÀιÙÄ«¶ó °ÔÀÓ</STRONG></FONT></A> </br><img title=onclick=image_window(this) style="CURSOR: pointer" src="http://pds.joinsmsn.com/news/component/htmlphoto_mmdata/201103/25/htm_20110325104725c000c010-002.JPG" name=target_resize_image[] tmp_width="300" tmp_height="225" target="_blank" /> </br> </br> </br> U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh on Monday spent several hours examining jurors about their backgrounds and biases, as the companies began the trial after more than a year of pretrial jousting. Opening statements by the lawyers are expected to begin on Tuesday.
Apple and Samsung, the ¿Â¶óÀιÙÄ«¶ó °ÔÀÓ(www.binu2014.nl.ae) world's largest consumer electronics corporations, are waging legal war around the world, accusing each other of patent violations as they vie for supremacy in a fast-growing market for mobile devices.
The fight began last year when Apple sued Samsung in a San Jose, California, federal court, accusing the South Korean company of slavishly copying the iPhone and iPad. Samsung countersued.
Long lines outside the federal courthouse in San Jose marked the beginning of the trial as lawyers, media and analysts flooded the building to watch the proceedings.
Seven men and three women were eventually picked for the 10-member jury, which also includes a store operations manager for a cycling retailer, a systems engineer and a benefits and payroll manager who works with startups.
The jury was selected after Koh questioned nearly three dozen members of the jury pool on a host of issues, including their choice of phones, how the economic downturn impacted their lives, experience with the legal system and connections to either Samsung, Apple, Google Inc or its Motorola Mobility unit. </br> </br> </br> ¡á¢¹¿Â¶óÀιÙÄ«¶ó °ÔÀÓ¢·¡á¡ö¢Ëhttp://www.binu2014.nl.ae¢Ë¡÷ |
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