Seems like a no-brainer: Enable your smartphone so it can rest on 
the table and get an instant power charge without the fuss of cables. 
Who wouldn't want that feature, right?
 It turns out that the 
realities of wireless charging have been anything but simple. Even if 
your smartphone happens to have the capability, there's a good chance it
 may not work with the charging station at Starbucks. And iPhone and 
iPad users are out of luck, given that Apple refuses to embrace the 
technology.
 Now you can add legal infighting among board members 
of a key wireless-charging company to the list of reasons why you 
probably won't be able to top off your smartphone at the local coffee 
shop anytime soon.
 Three board members of Israel-based Powermat 
Technologies sued the company and CEO Thorsten Heins in late October, 
arguing that Heins is operating without an approved budget and steering 
the business into insolvency, according to court documents filed in 
Israel and reviewed by CNET. In the company's legal response also seen 
by CNET, Powermat called the complaint "deficient, biased, distorted and
 deceptive." 
 Powermat further defended itself in a statement 
last week. "By revealing these and other details about the company's 
turnaround, Powermat is optimistic that the court will see through the 
substantial misstatements and malicious half-truths," the company said.
 The legal drama comes as things were starting to look up for wireless 
charging. Over the past year, Powermat had managed to expand its number 
of charging locations sevenfold for a total of 1,400. Samsung 
incorporated Powermat's technology into flagship smartphones like the 
Galaxy S6 and has heavily promoted the feature. Powermat had also 
settled a long-standing rivalry with another wireless-charging group, 
igniting the potential for more compatibility between devices and 
charging stations.
 The lawsuit, which 
seeks to restrict Powermat from proceeding with its current budget, 
could kill any momentum for the embrace of wireless charging. Even a 
temporary slowdown could hamstring the company's push to create a more 
commonly accepted standard for wireless charging. A roadblock could also
 hurt the company's chances of getting the tech into more mobile 
products or of bolstering the number of charging stations.
 It's another headache for Heins, who had previously tried, and failed, to turn around smartphone maker BlackBerry before exiting as CEO in late 2013.
 Heins filed his own affidavit in the Powermat suit, disputing the claims of his antagonists and defending his actions.
 "It is clear that the accusations the petitioners are making against me
 and my management team are baseless," he said in the affidavit.
 The lawsuit, meanwhile, alleges a "serious trust crisis" in the company's board that worsens every day.
 Adding to the drama, one of the board members suing Powermat is Ran 
Poliakine, founder and former chairman and CEO of the company. Late last
 year, Poliakine volunteered to step down and take a reduced role amid 
investor pressure, which was part of an agreement that led to the hiring of Heins.
 He's clearly being more active now.
source: http://www.cnet.com/news/wireless-charging-technology-just-got-another-hurdle-thrown-at-it/ 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
