PixyMisa
Persnickety Insect
That has absolutely nothing to do with obviousness as it pertains to patent law.
Or Palm's Treo range, which came out around the same time as the P800 - five years before the iPhone. That sentence is simply a lie.Trade dress complaint: http://www.scribd.com/doc/53458125/Complaint-iPhone-Trade-Dress
Love one of the first parts: "...before the iPhone, cell phones were utilitarian devices with keypads for dialling and small passive display screens that did not allow for touch control....".
Yeah apart from of course phones like the P800 or the XDA - and the XDA (1 & 2) is one of the best prior art arguments about Apple's claims.
Or Palm's Treo range, which came out around the same time as the P800 - five years before the iPhone. That sentence is simply a lie.
I know that Apple is one of, if not the, most profitable companies, and people on the internet love to talk about them. But you wouldn't know it from market shares.
I very rarely even see people with Apple phones or computers.
Apple doesn't even have 5% of the worldwide PC OS market share, and are lucky if they have over single digit in the US, compared to nearly Microsofts nearly 90% PC OS domination.
AFAIK the only thing Apple has a majority OS market share in is tablets and that's just barely. They have 54% compared to 44.6% of tablets running Android. With the Android % rising, and the Apple % falling.
http://www.theverge.com/2012/3/14/2869858/apple-54-7-percent-tablet-market-q4-11-kindle-fire-idc
http://www.pcworld.com/article/2602...g_for_releasing_documents_in_iphone_suit.htmlMy prediction: if he bothers to answer at all, it will be to an second-hand source, like an article or blog post with a misinformed title like "Apple patents rectangle." Essentially saying, "Hey, I'm not the origin of this fact-free opinion; I'm just passing it along!"
Exactly, component hardware is advancing at an astonishing rate and the uses of the new hardware to make finished products is obvious to everyone in the relevant industries, yet we have the patent office awarding patents to the one that wins the race to the patent office.That's odd, because the Judge in this case told Samsung they could not present their earlier phones that had these features as evidence.
Also, as I already pointed out, sometimes tech can arrive at a point where something is possible. It can be both obvious at that time and obviously not been done before. Just because it wasn't done before does not mean it isn't obvious! It's because it only just became possible ! That flat out makes that part of patent law ridiculous. Sure, that can be a good way to sometimes tell if something is obvious. But there are clearly situations where it is not.
Trade dress complaint: http://www.scribd.com/doc/53458125/Complaint-iPhone-Trade-Dress
Love one of the first parts: "...before the iPhone, cell phones were utilitarian devices with keypads for dialling and small passive display screens that did not allow for touch control....".
Yeah apart from of course phones like the P800 or the XDA - and the XDA (1 & 2) is one of the best prior art arguments about Apple's claims.
Yes, that's what you do in the opening (introduction and background) sections of a brief.OMG. That whole first paragraph is BS and marketing speak. Sophisticated! Elegant!
http://www.pcworld.com/article/2602...g_for_releasing_documents_in_iphone_suit.html
Apple gets to claim in court that the Samsung F700 copied the look of the iPhone. Judge Koh refuses to let Samsung counter that the F700 preceded the introduction of the iPhone. Also see Darat's pics of this design years before the iPhone existed.
Koh also placed a 25 hour limit on arguments by both sides. This means that Apple, the plaintiff, can make accusation after accusation, and Samsung is forced to use all their alloted time defending the accusations and not in making their case. Apple may win this lawsuit the same way creationists "win" debates with those supporting the ToE, by making use of the fact that it takes far less time to make a claim than it does to counter the claim. By limiting the time to respond, it ensures that claims will go unchallenged despite their being wrong.
Koh seems way out of her league in this one, too bad a competent judge like Richard Posner isn't the one hearing the case.
Of course, but realize that time is on Apple's side. Even if Samsung wins their appeal by that time the products they are fighting over will be obsolete.Bu won't any clear mistakes made by the judge be easy grounds for appeal?
Yes, that's what you do in the opening (introduction and background) sections of a brief.
It's clear why that was what was quoted - it's much easier to poke holes in the empty rhetoric than in the substantive arguments.
As far as I can see the whole concept of a nearly completely touch screen phone was invented by Apple.Are you still demanding evidence that touch screens invented long before Apple existed were intended to be manipulated by fingers?
And are you completely unaware that Apple is claiming "trade dress" on rectangular phones with rounded corners?
It was quoted because it is from actual Apple legal documents... you know the stuff that a court uses to decide the merit of a particular case...
Yes, that's what you do in the opening (introduction and background) sections of a brief.
It's clear why that was what was quoted - it's much easier to poke holes in the empty rhetoric than in the substantive arguments.
As for the rectangle with rounded corners. It may seem a bit OTT to patent that design. However the iPhone doesn't even have Apple written on the front of it. How bold is that, to market a product that doesn't even have its trademark stamp on the front. Stroke of genius! Samsung just had to do it, missing the point entirely. That point being that the iPhone is a masterful stroke of Iconic Graphic Design. The phone when its off is nearly completely blank, but anyone anywhere in any developed country would know what it was instantly. That I assume is what they are trying to defend.
They could have left it out. And the line about touchscreens wasn't just marketing speak like the rest, it was an actual lie.
The BS is less explicit as I read on, but not entirely gone. Paragraph 13 mentions the "Multi-Touch(tm)" interface by name, but they describe it only as allowing users to navigate by swiping and tapping (rather than describing the actual unique feature of allowing MORE than that by recognizing more than one contact point). Funny that they describe only the non-unique aspect of their interface as if that is the invention.
Their icons are a mixture of validity. They show pictures of Samsung's green phone icon, and how similar it is to Apple's. Here's the problem...
[qimg]http://the-gadgeteer.com/assets/apple-iphone-48.jpg[/qimg][qimg]http://www.freewarepocketpc.net/img2/dialpad_flower.png[/qimg][qimg]http://www.smartphoneforums.com/forums/attachments/samsung-i700/4116d1093752741-removing-verizon-logo-phone-dial-pad-pc_capture13.jpg[/qimg]
One of those things isnotlike the others, and it didn't come first. If Apple wanted their icons to be unique symbols of the Apple experience, they sure didn't try very hard when they chose a green background with a 45-degree white handset to represent a telephone. All they did was use an existing and common icon without text.
Other icons are less generic. The music-note-in-front-of-CD is two common symbols combined, so I'll give Apple that one (unless/until that exact combo is found prior to apple).
Samsung's notepad icons are similar to Apple's, but then again the Apple icon for the notepad is... a flat picture of a common notepad. Not much effort on Apple's part to be unique; they chose the most generic icon imaginable.
The one Apple icon there which does have a truly unique presentation is the settings icon. It has unusual spiky teeth on the gears and a large gear which fades behind the two foreground gears in the corners. But Samsung's is just a plane flat-toothed gear. Gears are stinging cliches in logo design. We were designing a tech blog logo around 2002, and the first thing we said was that it should not have any g__d___ gears in it because it is pathetically trite. Apple did manage to make gears look fresh, and Samsung clearly did not copy any of the unique details.
As far as I can see the whole concept of a nearly completely touch screen phone was invented by Apple.
Try to think what phones were on the market before the iphone. Think of all the different ways phone manufacturers were inventing ways to navigate the screen content. We had nipples, touch pads, buttons, phones that slid open to display a complete keyboard.
"Ex post facto analysis"
If it's so "obvious", why can't either you or WildCat ever seem to point to anyone who even hinted at this type of scrolling prior to the filing date of this patent?
Just a hint, is all we need. I won't even hold you to the standards of an "enabling disclosure" that the patent office is legally required to follow.
I'm not sure about multi-touch but you'll generally find that there are papers dating decades back before a technology finally makes it.