WTF! This is similar to the buttons on my samsung tv and many other tv's. Putting them on a laptop does not make it a new idea or anything patentable. Just how stupid are the patent office?
Apple patents touch-sensitive controls for MacBook
Apple has filed for a patent on a system which places the controls for a notebook computer within the outer bezel of the screen. Patent number 8,654,524, published Tuesday, describes a set of systems in which sensors are placed in both the casing and outer screen bezel (the black box around the outside of the display) allowing …
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Tuesday 18th February 2014 22:07 GMT Bob Vistakin
This is how stupid they are. Some guy patented a stick just to deliberately take the piss.
This level of stupidity, combined with the best law money can buy, is how companies plumb out of ideas can get away with this kind of rounded corner type shit.
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Wednesday 19th February 2014 00:19 GMT Dave 126
Having read through the linked patent application, the prior art that springs to mind is that of the MacBook that some guy hacked about with some years ago... basically, he accessed the accelerometers in the MacBook's HDD and mapped the output to some common user commands. End result? Smacking the left hand side of the MacBook's lid made his browser go back, smacking the right-hand side made it go forward.
Without commenting further on this specific application (I do try and grok a patent application before commenting here, but I am not a patent expert), the OP is correct; the Patent Office might be stupid, whereas a company would be stupid not to try their luck.
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Wednesday 19th February 2014 00:33 GMT Dave 126
>companies plumb out of ideas can get away with this kind of rounded corner type shit.
'Rounded corners' wasn't a patent. It was a Design Patent- a very different concept, albeit one with an unhelpful name. If you haven't got the distinction clear in your mind, your comments are not likely to be to the benefit of anyone here.
On the face of it, Apple had a point - the phones Samsung released after the introduction of the iPhone looked very similar to the iPhone, since they sported the same radius of corners as the iPhone, whereas Sammy's previous efforts hadn't.
Whilst the phrase 'rounded corners' might have featured in the complaint, it was merely a part of the description. It was the ratio between the specific radius of the corners and of the other dimensions of the device that was covered under the Design Patent.
My old man still asks to this day "Is that an iPhone?" when seeing any touch-screen phone (even though I've got him to buy himself a Nexus 5), suggesting that the charge of confusing potential customers is not without merit.
Lay it to rest, please.
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Wednesday 19th February 2014 07:19 GMT Bob Vistakin
"My old man still asks to this day "Is that an iPhone?" when seeing any touch-screen phone"
Even the Sony Ericsson P800, released in 2002?
The reality distortion field is strong in this one.
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Wednesday 19th February 2014 08:40 GMT MrZoolook
"My old man still asks to this day "Is that an iPhone?" when seeing any touch-screen phone (even though I've got him to buy himself a Nexus 5), suggesting that the charge of confusing potential customers is not without merit."
It suggests to me that he was oversaturated with iPhone adverts to the point where he assumes any phone with any radius of corners is an iPhone. I mean really... are you suggesting that at no point in pre Apple history has a phone with that degree of cornerage been produced. There's a huge back catalogue of phones to measure there...
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Wednesday 19th February 2014 11:12 GMT Peter 48
"My old man still asks to this day "Is that an iPhone?" " That is nothing but an indicator of apple's marketing genius. They managed to embed themselves in the public's consciousness and therefore became synonymous with touch-screen phones.
"the phones Samsung released after the introduction of the iPhone looked very similar to the iPhone, since they sported the same radius of corners as the iPhone, whereas Sammy's previous efforts hadn't." Ignoring the fact that Samsung was proven not to having the same radius, this was a classic example of selective image choice, ignoring all the non touch screen phones samsung released after the ihpone and ignoring the touchscreen phone samung released before the iphone. Sure the Galaxy S (http://www.gsmarena.com/samsung_i9000_galaxy_s-3115.php) bears some resemblance to the iPhone 3, but it actually bears more resemblance to the Samsung F700 (http://www.gsmarena.com/samsung_f700-1849.php)
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Wednesday 19th February 2014 16:34 GMT Eddy Ito
It's Ok
My mother gets asked the same thing when people see her LG Prada so I'd tend to agree that many people have trouble distinguishing one rectangular slab with rounded corners from another. Then again if you covered the grills and badges of the current Camry, Accord and Impala, I'd wager a lot of people wouldn't be able to identify which was which and you could probably convince a good number that they were the last three model years of the same car.
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Wednesday 19th February 2014 20:49 GMT Eddy Ito
Existing or not is completely irrelevant. Your ideas don't have to exist, ever.
Patents protect an IDEA, not a product.
Just who is misinformed, other than you?
Actually you have that backward. You can't patent an idea, it has to be a process, a machine, an "article of manufacture" (a.k.a. a product), composition of matter (such as a synthetic material, molecular structure, metal alloy, etc) or an improvement on the aforementioned. In fact while your invention doesn't have to currently exist, it has to be capable of existing which pretty much eliminates ideas since a flying pony is an idea but good luck patenting one since I'm quite certain, even as lax as they are, the USPTO will require proof that it can be made and does what you say. I know people who have initially been turned down for patents because the examiner didn't believe it was possible and so had to demonstrate the prototype to prove that it did do what they claimed.
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Thursday 20th February 2014 00:07 GMT Anonymous Coward
> Another load of misinformed WTF'ers commenting, I mean screeching, about something that may or may not exist, May or may not come to market and just because there is a suggestion that it is about Apple.
Mate, this is a patent and as such a warning to everyone who wants to do this sort of thing not to or to pay up. An innovative but small outfit can't afford to defend against a lawsuit based on this and other crap and may easily get fucked. Patents are mostly bullshit, this one incredibly so. And seeing that Apple is not shy about asserting their proudly held IP, the screeching is very much appropriate.
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Wednesday 19th February 2014 03:13 GMT Chris 244
Yes, they did just patent the ON/OFF button
"The location of the sensors may be placed at strategic locations."
"In one embodiment, a proximity sensor or touch sensor may be placed near a feedback indicator such as a sleep indicator. When a user approaches and/or touches, the sleep indicator or area around the sleep indicator, the electronic device may initiate a sleep or wake function. For example, if the electronic device is already in sleep, the user action may cause the computer to wake (or vice versa). "
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Tuesday 18th February 2014 21:17 GMT Dig
This is truly revolutionary for Apple
Instead of take previous invention from a computer and apply to a mobile device we now take sensors from a mobile device and apply them to a phone. WOW I wish I had thought of that. I guess the hard part is known which ideas are worth patenting and which I would think are obvious and not worth patenting. Perhaps I just can't afford the fees, or the lawyers.
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Tuesday 18th February 2014 21:18 GMT Efros
Okay not on the bezel
But my 6 year old lenovo Ideapad Y550 has a bunch of soft controls above the keyboard that are part of the casing and are touch sensitive. Not a leap of imagination to shift them up about 1/2 an inch onto the bezel of the screen, shurely not patentable, hopefully the filing is filed where it is most appropriate.
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Tuesday 18th February 2014 21:22 GMT cyke1
Re: Okay not on the bezel
my LG tv is 4 years old and has bezel touch controls, my brothers tv is 5-6 years old and it has them as well. I just worked on a friends laptop that has touch controls on it though not on bezel and it was a machine that game with vista. So taking current tech and putting them on screen bezel is not an innovation, just re-purposing current tech and trying to act like they are innovative.
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Tuesday 18th February 2014 23:23 GMT DiViDeD
Re: Okay not on the bezel
See yours and raise, etc.
I had an early Technics or Teac 4:3 flatscreen (tft I think, but could be wrong - bloody awful quality by today's standards anyway) TV with a row of soft touch controls on the bezel of the screen.
It would have been made some time in the 90s. Oh, and with a screen size of around 20" it was most deffo a 'mobile device" (as long as you had a good length of aerial cable to hand!)
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Tuesday 18th February 2014 22:01 GMT GotThumbs
Yet one more Apple patent on existing technology.
"sensors are placed in both the casing and outer screen bezel (the black box around the outside of the display) allowing for the implementation of controls and buttons."
Like both my monitors have for power and OSD controls?
This is NOT new, but I that never stopped Apple.
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Wednesday 19th February 2014 15:57 GMT Anonymous Coward
Re: Yet one more Apple patent on existing technology.
""sensors are placed in both the casing and outer screen bezel (the black box around the outside of the display) allowing for the implementation of controls and buttons."
Like both my monitors have for power and OSD controls?
This is NOT new, but I that never stopped Apple."
Should read this is NOT new why is why Apple have filed a patent!
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Wednesday 19th February 2014 08:26 GMT Corinne
A bit confused here
I've scanned the Patent which is claiming an invention (so not a design patent), and references a number of related patents filed by the same company on the same day which are summarised in the patent. Between them they seem to have patented ANY "electronic device" that has any form of I/O control set into the housing that isn't an obvious inset device e.g. a keyboard or mouse/tracker.
So ignoring all the cases of Prior Art that exist (TVs, PC screens, Kindle, even remote control car keys) , they seem to have tried to patent every possibly permutation of controls embedded into the housing of "an electronic device".
But they also list a load of other patents which are referenced, many of which seem to already cover things claimed in the Apple patent. Hence my confusion - they seem to be patenting a general idea rather than a specific application of an idea (which I thought wasn't supposed to happen anyway, but I may be wrong there) , while there have already been a number of other patents under the same USPO system that use the same idea.
Oh and Dave126 - that's really only the same as calling any e-book reader a Kindle, or even any vacuum cleaner a Hoover. In general people tend to refer to many device types by the brand of the most famous version of it
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Wednesday 19th February 2014 10:15 GMT Big_Boomer
Patent?
Design should not be patentable. IDEAS are what patents are for. Design is what COPYRIGHT is for. The whole point of a Patent is to prevent others from stealing your idea without compensating you thus enabling you to develop the idea into a commercial product. Copyright is designed to earn income from the use of your creation (be it a product, design, music or whatever). Apple and others are just using the existing system to milk extra income from badly written Patent Law. If I were in the US Patent Office I would be declining any patent that even smelled of Design.
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Wednesday 19th February 2014 12:06 GMT Anonymous Coward
My 1997 Psion Series5 has a touch-sensitive icon strip around the screen. From 17 years ago.
Patents (part of my work) are only supposed to be granted for things that are "novel" (no-one has stated them publically before) and "inventive" (ie no-one who's reasonably informed in the business might be expected to come up with the idea). ...or perhaps, in the case of the USPTO, "unless it's an American applicant, for whom the grant of a patent will favour the American economy" ;-)
That's the reason why it's always the USPTO granting everything American that comes their way, ISTM - and not in other countries. I've yet to hear a single reason why countries wouldn't sneakily favour their own companies' applicants - just, no-one seems to do it anywhere near as nakedly as the USA (does the USPTO grant ludicrous Samsung patents? No.)
God help us all if the forthcoming "Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership" does anything to harmonise patents.
So, where were we, yes: my 1997 Psion Series5... [etc]
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Wednesday 19th February 2014 12:14 GMT Jess--
Prior art within 15 feet of me
3 x Asus monitors (annoying touch buttons on the bezel)
Dell laptop (touch buttons for media control, play pause etc admittedly not on the bezel)
Sharp TV (touch buttons on the bezel for all controls)
The last place I want touch sensitive buttons is on a laptop screen bezel, sods law says that I will hit the power button when I adjust the screen angle to get rid of a reflection over what I am trying to see