Looking for gPhone Clues in Google Patents
iced_tea writes "What do Google patents say about the company's possible plans for a Google phone? News.com took a look at some of the related technologies. Just one example: 'This image shows a diagram from a patent filed June 30, 2005 and published October 12, 2006, called "Non-Standard Locality-Based Text Entry." The inventor is listed as Shumeet Baluja, a senior staff research scientist at Google, and the assignee is listed as Google. The invention would allow an English speaker, for example, to use the keypad of any mobile phone to enter Chinese characters, according to Google patent scrutinizer Stephen Arnold.'"
Love him or hate him, Cringely is talking about a somewhat related topic today.
Let us not become the evil that we deplore.
If you want news from today, you have to come back tomorrow.
Google has applications which run on 'phones -- I use the java Gmail app on mine. This could just as easily be a software patent for more 3rd party products, rather than their own hardware. Google make software which runs on PCs, but that doesn't mean that they sell them.
Have a look at Zhùyïn fúhào, also known as bopomofo. Makes it pretty easy to input using the basic Latin alphabet, though the software side is pretty complicated I'm sure.
Hangul wouldn't need much beyond autocomplete, if you're getting fancy (no Chinese characters used much outside of academia these days). And hey, though Japanese is more complicated, if the folks in Japan can get their phones set up to do this (and they have already, complete with easy switching to Latin alphanumeric input), it shouldn't be too hard for Google or someone else to reproduce that functionality.
Cheers,
"What in the name of Fats Waller is that?"
"A four-foot prune."
No way in hell would I use Google Patent Search for any serious searches when doing real patent work. That's like handing your ideas over to them! They wouldn't monitor popular patent searches to get ideas, now, would they?