Slashdot Mirror


IBM Wants Patent For Lotus Notes-Free Meetings

theodp writes "Over at IBM, the Lotus Notes team has 'invented' preventing the use of their own product during meetings. Self-described patent reformer Big Blue has asked the USPTO for a patent covering Suppressing De-Focusing Activities During Selective Scheduled Meetings by forcing meeting attendees to 'submit to the computing system suspension requirements.' What's next — a patent for Verizon for blocking cellphone usage during movies?"

6 of 179 comments (clear)

  1. It's a brilliant tactical move, really by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If IBM patents meeting without Lotus Notes, and doesn't license it, then that means everyone will have to have meetings WITH Lotus Notes! Most companies don't have it, so now they'll need to license it.

  2. Or you could tell people not to bring their laptop by dave1791 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The app seems like a verbose way of saying that the calendar system shuts down access to other apps during the meeting; which is a technical solution to a social problem (people banging away on laptop keyboards during meetings)

  3. Uninformed summary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    One part of IBM's strategy for patent reform has been to build as large a patent library as possible, but enforce only (what they see as) legitimate innovation while using the rest only to club patent trolls. While I have no objection to anti-software patent advocates, or full-blown anti-imaginary property advocates, insinuating that IBM is guilt of misrepresentation or hypocrisy with this filing is absurd.

  4. Re:Sounds new to me by subreality · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't know of any existing products with this functionality. So they wrote it up first, and you're bitching because you lack the creativity or ambition to do so yourself.

    For prior art, check out any MMORPG with a parental control feature, or firewalls with time lock options. Maybe there's a sliver of innovation in that it custom schedules it based on when your meetings are, but that's pretty thin.

    Oh, you don't like software patents? So competitive corporations should just throw in the towel and abandon patents that are allowed in our current system?

    No, my plan is to bitch about them to draw attention to how broken the system is until we have the support to legislate them away. Until then I support companies' rights to keep trying for these things, and the people's rights to mock them for it.

  5. Re:Or you could tell people not to bring their lap by high_rolla · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Indeed. We seem to be evolving a culture where we try to solve every problem with technology. Sometimes technology is not the answer. Sometimes you have to realise that technology is not curing the problem, it is just solving a symptom. And like most diseases, it will simply evolve around your attempt.

    --
    Ryans Tutorials - A collection of technology tutorials.
  6. Re:Or you could tell people not to bring their lap by hazem · · Score: 4, Insightful

    We seem to be evolving a culture where we try to solve every problem with technology. Sometimes technology is not the answer.

    No. Clearly the problem is that people are invited to meetings when they feel there is more value in doing something else than actually paying attention at the meeting.

    Probably the best solution is to have fewer meetings and make them shorter and more focused.

    If you then still need the meeting and making it shorter and focused does not keep the attention of the people involved, maybe they need a different job where they won't be distracted by such meetings.

    I work for a large corporation and I believe we have far too many meetings that are not really needed. When I'm bored in one of these meetings, I like to look around the table and try to estimate the cost in salary and benefits of the particular meeting. With a VP, a handful of directors and several managers, a one-hour meeting easily costs the company a few thousand dollars.

    This kind of technology won't solve the problem of people doing other things in meetings and it will most likely just piss them off.