Clearly, Qualcomm's board of directors don't think this is enough. In its statement confirming the second rejection, Qualcomm "offered to meet with Broadcom to see if it can address the serious deficiencies in value and certainty in its proposal."

In a letter published with the statement, Qualcomm wants Broadcom to answer a few pertinent questions, including the following:

What is the true highest price at which you would be prepared to acquire Qualcomm? Is it $82 per share or is it higher?

Is Broadcom willing to commit to take whatever actions are necessary to ensure the proposed transaction closes?

It appears from the first question that Qualcomm thinks Broadcom is lowballing. As for what "actions are necessary to ensure the proposed transaction closes," which appear to be related to "significant regulatory hurdles". In the letter, Qualcomm said it's "indisputable that if Qualcomm entered into a merger agreement and, after an extended regulatory review period the transaction did not close, Qualcomm would be enormously and irreparably damaged." Because of that, Qualcomm wants Broadcom to be extremely clear and specific about how far it would go, so that it can "properly evaluate the risk to Qualcomm's shareholders."

It's obvious that these two have a lot to discuss before any progress can be made. If this meeting does happen and the two parties can agree on a price, then perhaps third time may be the charm.