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Dean Kamen Awarded Patent For Robot Competition Rules

An anonymous reader writes "Dean Kamen, the inventor of the Segway and the founder of the FIRST Robotics Competition has been granted Patent 7,507,169, that describes one of the previous competitions. The main invention is a ranking system that ranks teams not only on their score, but their opponents' score, so teams are rewarded for helping their opponents score more. It is claimed that this ranking system promotes the made up phrases 'coopertition' and 'gracious professionalism.' It had three rejections, and even more appeals, before finally being accepted six years after the first application. While a majority of his 130 patents are for things related to his inventions, which are as diverse as medical equipment, unique uses for Stirling engines, and transportation, this one seems a little dubious. Dean opposes the Patent Reform Act of 2009, which would make it easier to overturn patents after they are granted."

110 comments

  1. Have a hammer... by StCredZero · · Score: 2, Funny

    If all you have is a hammer, everything starts looking like a nail. Maybe Dean's been patenting too much stuff and needs a breather?

    1. Re:Have a hammer... by fluch · · Score: 2, Funny

      And somewhere an eager lawyer reads your comment and thinks: "Hmmm....!"

    2. Re:Have a hammer... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      I guess some positions would fail the test of obviousness... and I'd definitely would wanna be In the chair of the guy examining prior arts

    3. Re:Have a hammer... by snl2587 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Ah, a patent that no one on Slashdot would ever be sued for violating.

    4. Re:Have a hammer... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Dude thats gross, you want to sit on the lap of the guy who is watching videos of people having sex? I think I'll pass.

    5. Re:Have a hammer... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

      I thought that you wife had that patent. I mean, I keep seeing people pay her royalties...

    6. Re:Have a hammer... by Miseph · · Score: 0

      Don't talk about your mother like that. She'd be very upset if she found out you kids know.

      --
      Try not to take me more seriously than I take myself.
    7. Re:Have a hammer... by merreborn · · Score: 4, Funny

      If all you have is a hammer, everything starts looking like a nail.

      Dear sir,

      I am writing to you regarding a new matter that has been brought to my attention by my clients. In this particular matter our office represents Dean Kamen.

      The use of the cliche "If all you have is a hammer, everything starts looking like a nail" in an electronic forum has been patented by our client in patent #8,219,493: "Use Of Hammer-Based Metaphors in Electronic Discussion". Your use of this phrase is in violation of United States patent law, and I request that you remove this content immediately.

      I have a good faith belief, and in fact know for certain, that the posting of these works was not authorized by my clients, any agent of my clients, or the law.

      Sincerely,
      Herman J. Bloodsucker, Esq.

    8. Re:Have a hammer... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

      thats no way to talk to your big brother

      -- love mom

    9. Re:Have a hammer... by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm pretty sure there are people out there who could establish prior art....oh yeah, the fact that there are people out there kind of establishes prior art.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    10. Re:Have a hammer... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was created by asexual budding, you insensitive clod!

    11. Re:Have a hammer... by markymark193 · · Score: 0

      Dean Kamen has got lots of awards and he always try to get the best machine to present to world. I like his Segway scooter invention which will be very beneficial. He don't sleep sometimes whenever he in under the project of any invention. He says about him and his team âoeThey work all the time. They donâ(TM)t let failure demoralize or destroy them. They pick themselves up and keep going and eventually, every once in a while, one of your ideas actually breaks through and works, and it makes all that stuff seem worthwhile.â I think one day he will gonna give a best machine to the world which will help the human which noway has thought of it. http://www.start-an-internet-business.net/

    12. Re:Have a hammer... by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      Sincerely,
      Herman J. Bloodsucker, Esq.

      Attorney at Law.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    13. Re:Have a hammer... by Paul+Fernhout · · Score: 1

      Dear sir,

      I am writing to you regarding a new matter that has been brought to my attention by my clients. In this particular matter our office represents Dean Kamen's evil twin brother.

      The writing of cease and desist orders in an electronic form has been patented by our client in patent #9,219,493: "Use Of Cease And Desist Orders in Electronic Discussion". Your use of such a letter is in violation of United States patent law, and I request that you remove this content immediately.

      I have a good faith belief, and in fact know for certain, that the posting of these works was not authorized by my clients, any agent of my clients, or the law.

      Sincerely,
      Dewey, Cheetum, and Howe, Attorneys at law

      --
      A 21st century issue: the irony of technologies of abundance in the hands of those still thinking in terms of scarcity.
  2. He "opposes the patent reform act" by youn · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What's the matter... he's afraid that after patenting too much obvious and frivolous stuff like robot competition rules, they'll start telling him... duhhhh, this is too obvious dude :) ?

    --
    Never antropomorphize computers, they do not like that :p
    1. Re:He "opposes the patent reform act" by LaskoVortex · · Score: 1

      What's the matter... he's afraid that after patenting too much obvious and frivolous stuff like robot competition rules, they'll start telling him... duhhhh, this is too obvious dude :) ?

      He's not afraid at all now that he's filed for a patent on the process of rejecting a patent. When it gets granted, you can be sure he won't license it to the USPO.

      --
      Just callin' it like I see it.
    2. Re:He "opposes the patent reform act" by pjt33 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Forget obviousness. Aren't patents supposed to have industrial application?

  3. New terms by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Here's one for ya Dean... "doucheventor"

  4. Dubious patent still. by JavaManJim · · Score: 2, Interesting

    How would this compare or limit other sports like a team shooting match where individuals and teams have scores?

    Then this patent mimics basic biology where individual and cooperative behavior is honored. Say a bacteria that reproduces wildly that's individual performance. Then that bacterial produces a toxin that helps other bacterial thrive by eliminating competition. That's team help.

    I think the guy is just patent crazy and has a blank space on his honor wall.

     

    1. Re:Dubious patent still. by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 2, Informative

      How would this compare or limit other sports like a team shooting match where individuals and teams have scores?

      Not at all. The patent is extremely specific to a four+ robot competition.

      --
      Your ad here. Ask me how!
    2. Re:Dubious patent still. by JavaManJim · · Score: 1

      Thanks, sorry about the poor robots who will have to
      spit out patent fees during the competition.

    3. Re:Dubious patent still. by thomasinx · · Score: 1

      Actually, a bigger problem with this is that there is plenty of prior art for this patent. Gotta wonder why it was accepted. I know that I've seen 'bonus points' awarded for giving an assist, even in a competitive game without teams.

      Of course, that being said, this patent was focused towards competitive robotics, which is new enough that perfectly matching prior art is hard to find. However, it makes me wonder... Can I take an idea that is common knowledge and patent it in a new area? I can only see this making sense if the new application is especially novel.

      However, in this case I don't see it as a novel idea (or at least not patent-worthy). All this is doing is limiting how people can score robot competitions, and setting himself up for litigation.

      Does anyone know how much of a record Dean Kamen has as an aggressive litigant?

      -T

    4. Re:Dubious patent still. by JavaManJim · · Score: 1

      Not being a patent person, I suspect you bring up an excellent point. Is something ordinary in one circumstance (prior art too) patentable when its used in a new domain? I think not.

      I think what we have here is a derivative patent. Here its derivative from a common domain.

      Thanks, great thought!
      Jim

  5. Mod subject interesting by tiananmen+tank+man · · Score: 4, Interesting

    "Dean opposes the Patent Reform Act of 2009, which would make it easier to overturn patents after they are granted" ... Just like the guy (Victor Hugo?) who brought to life copyright and its terms of death+ years, he was old and had a lot of writings and had 4 children ... lots to gain from copyright.

    1. Re:Mod subject interesting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >(Victor Hugo?)

      Probably not (French) :
      http://books.google.com/books?id=i_Wz-2vZA5UC&pg=PA155&lpg=PA155&dq=Victor+Hugo+droit+d%27auteur&source=bl&ots=VnCg7s0bXV&sig=tndA1KVG1avYPHRY4OIUa19deOk&hl=en&ei=-cALSuj_HoLO-Aa047jIBg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=2#PPA161,M1

  6. Tights and gyros? by arpwatch · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Since when does Superman need to ride around on a damn two-wheeled electric breadbox?

  7. If Dean could patent his ego... by Slartibartfast · · Score: 4, Funny

    He'd be all set.

    Sadly, neither irony nor sarcasm were used in the making of this post.

    1. Re:If Dean could patent his ego... by Ihmhi · · Score: 3, Funny

      Aye. When the Segway was debuted a few years back, all of the news stations (at least in the NYC area) were talking about the "transportation revolution". I was expecting flying cars or jetpacks, not something that looks like it was built by a Power Wheels engineer after an all-nighter.

    2. Re:If Dean could patent his ego... by nate_in_ME · · Score: 1

      As one involved with FIRST for the last 10+ years, as well as following the buzz leading up to the debut of the Segway, both the parent and GP post have brought up a common misconception. Dean himself was not alone in the hype machine that was the Segway. Rather, he showed it to his well-known friends(Jeff Bezos as just one example), as well as the author who leaked information while writing a book on the invention, and it was their comments to a large degree that generated a lot of the hype that Dean was criticized for after the Segway failed to live up to the expectations that the hype had created in everyone. If it had been Dean's quotes alone(of which a few can be found), it would have had much less of an effect. Every inventor thinks their project will change the world, but when other people start saying the same thing, that's when people stand up and take notice. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Segway

    3. Re:If Dean could patent his ego... by speedtux · · Score: 1

      It only makes sense to spend the money on patenting something if there is a realistic possibility of other people infringing. When it comes to Dean's ego, I don't think anybody else is capable of infringing...

    4. Re:If Dean could patent his ego... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Plus, if you've ever heard Dean speak, hype isn't the first word that comes to mind. Sleep maybe, but definitely not hype.

  8. Wait, wait, wait... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    You cannot copyright a game, but you are allowed to patent the rules? For shame!

    1. Re:Wait, wait, wait... by tepples · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You cannot copyright a game, but you are allowed to patent the rules?

      Correct. If you want exclusive rights to functionality, a patent is the way to go. Nintendo has a U.S. patent on the rules of Dr. Mario and Tetris 2; Konami has one on Dance Dance Revolution. The Tetris Company has had trouble shutting down developers of Tetris clones such as Gnometris and LTris because Elorg never sought a patent on the game, only a copyright on the game program and those audiovisual elements not dictated by functionality.

    2. Re:Wait, wait, wait... by f0dder · · Score: 1

      Isn't Guitar Hero & Rockband pretty much Dance Dance Revolution. But instead of a stomp pad you have instruments?

    3. Re:Wait, wait, wait... by Ethanol-fueled · · Score: 2, Informative

      Nintendo had the Power Pad way before Dance Dance Revolution was even a twinkle in anybody's eye.

    4. Re:Wait, wait, wait... by Theaetetus · · Score: 1

      You cannot copyright a game, but you are allowed to patent the rules? For shame!

      You should probably read your link...

      You cannot copyright an idea - you copyright an implementation. Patents are for ideas.

    5. Re:Wait, wait, wait... by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      Patents are for ideas.

      No they aren't. They're for inventions.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  9. freedom. by spanky+the+monk · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Ideas should be free. The idea that one can own an idea is, I believe, an ill conceived principal.

    Perhaps I should patent "patents".

    1. Re:freedom. by maxume · · Score: 1

      I've got a secret.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    2. Re:freedom. by Theaetetus · · Score: 1

      Ideas should be free. The idea that one can own an idea is, I believe, an ill conceived principal.

      An "ill conceived principal" that has existed for 2000 years and been codified in Western law for at least 500.

      Perhaps your idealistic "ideas should be free" concept is the ill conceived one.

    3. Re:freedom. by WillDraven · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The fact that an idea is old has no direct correlation on whether it is good or not.

      --
      This is my sig. There are many like it but this one is mine.
    4. Re:freedom. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      when similar features of a work are âoeas a practical matter indispensable, or at least standard, in the treatment of a given idea, they are treated like ideas and are therefore not protected by copyright.â

      But ideas are free! Inventions are not! Everyone knows that, I mean, the difference is quite clear to all of us, right...

  10. A patent for Robot Wars rules? by physburn · · Score: 1
    Thats not fair. Thats not fair:

    The famous Spaced clip

  11. We each get 100 points and you let me win by 1 by SteveWoz · · Score: 4, Funny

    Alliances?

    (I wish he'd licensed this to Dancing With The Stars!)

    --
    OK a new size TV
    1. Re:We each get 100 points and you let me win by 1 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, it's not quite like that. The way it was in 2000, during the qualifying rounds the winning team got three times the score of the losing team in qualifying points; the losing team got its own score. So often teams would score for their weaker opponents as well as themselves.

  12. Bad Patent for a Bad Invention by Kaboom13 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    As a former FIRST competitor, I can say that the consensus of 99% of the students HATED the retarded attempts at enforcing sportsmanship by silly tricks like the winner gets the losers score x3 in qualifying points. Combined with a completely broken randomization system (they tried to maximize the time teams had to recuperate between rounds, but the result was same handful of teams were in the random "pool" to pull from every round.) ensured the top seeded teams for the playoffs was practically random. It also made for what in my opinion was the most humiliating thing, where the winning team would have their opponent soundly beat, and would stop scoring for themselves and start scoring for their opponents. Any scoring and ranking system that makes College Football look fair and accurate is so flawed it should probably be patented and buried deep just so no one else can copy it.

    1. Re:Bad Patent for a Bad Invention by routerl · · Score: 3, Informative

      LOL

      It's interesting to see someone having the exact same memory. In my final year of High School, my FIRST team found itself on both sides of that humiliation. In different matches, we both had to score points for our opponents, and found our opponents scoring points for us.

      As I see it, the most serious imbalance in FIRST are those of the sponsors. How can a public school team sponsored by local transport and engineering companies seriously compete against, say, a team sponsored by both Microsoft and Delphi? For those who never competed, you should be aware that sponsorship, in FIRST, is not limited to supplying equipment and access to manufacturing facilities, but also employee-mentors, who provide varying (often unequal) levels of assistance during the design/build phase.

      No scoring system can regulate that sort of unbalance.

      --
      Trust me, kids; don't drink and post.
    2. Re:Bad Patent for a Bad Invention by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Gotta agree, FIRST was supposed to be an attempt to make engineering geeks heroic athletes, then it gradually turned into Rollerball, where a team might be allowed to win, but nobody was allowed to stand out on their own. Oh, and then you got to suffer through a "victory" celebration by listening to Dean drone on and on and on...

    3. Re:Bad Patent for a Bad Invention by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      As a member of a FIRST team that barely scrapes by on funding and has one consistent professional engineer, and a few others that show up on occasion (+me, a college student), I don't agree with your conclusions. In our 3 years of existence the worst we have finished is reaching the semi-finals.

      Also the current ranking algorithm uses the loser's score as a means of Strength of Schedule. It is a secondary ranking to points derived from WLT, 2 for a win, 1 for a tie, 0 for a loss. It is extremely difficult to find any other way to create a secondary ranking criteria because both your team members and opponents change throughout the competition.

      The randomization "issue" mentioned by the OP is also an artifact and the current randomization is regarded by most to be pretty good. The algorithm still has a consideration for time between matches, but it also uses many other factors including variety of teams faced in order to generate the schedule.

    4. Re:Bad Patent for a Bad Invention by dfenstrate · · Score: 4, Interesting

      This seems to be an extension of the last 30 years of defective parenting techniques- specifically, everyone's a winner and no one loses.

      The 'theory' have given us the latest, and most reviled, generation to enter the workplace: The 'millenials,' widely know for both a sense of entitlement and shirking individual responsibility for results.

      Obviously it's not universal to everyone in that age group, but ask anyone who's been hiring for decades- all generations have their quirks. The latest are the worst.

      Kamen's silly ideas in this area shows the limits of his otherwise able intellect.

      --
      Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms should be the name of a store, not a government agency.
    5. Re:Bad Patent for a Bad Invention by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The latest are the worst.

      The latest are always worst.

    6. Re:Bad Patent for a Bad Invention by Mr.+Freeman · · Score: 1

      99% of the students involved did not hate these measures. Perhaps YOU did, in which case you need to find another competition to enter.

      There was a lot of dissent about this year's rules, but to say that 99% of the participants have always hated the system is just asinine.

      --
      -1 disagree is not a modifier for a reason. -1 troll, flaimbait, redundant, overrated are NOT acceptable substitutes.
    7. Re:Bad Patent for a Bad Invention by Mr.+Freeman · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There isn't a "everyone is a winner" mentality in FIRST. Well, maybe a small one. But no one is handing out ribbons for people that don't win the competition. (Well, the participation medals, but they're marketed as just that: participation medals. More for record keeping than anything else TBH)

      The competition also isn't about the competition. It's about encouraging a bunch of students to get off their ass and go learn how to build a robot. The point isn't the competition, it's the learning.

      You argument is like saying "The school system is poor because there are no winners".

      --
      -1 disagree is not a modifier for a reason. -1 troll, flaimbait, redundant, overrated are NOT acceptable substitutes.
    8. Re:Bad Patent for a Bad Invention by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      The 'theory' have given us the latest, and most reviled, generation to enter the workplace: The 'millenials,' widely know for both a sense of entitlement and shirking individual responsibility for results.

      Get off my lawn!

      That's just old codger talk. "Blah, the newest generation is the worst."

      The 60's clearly produced the worst generation. They spread veneral disease like, well, a plague. They shirked more responsibility in Viet Nam than the millenials ever did. They decided that getting high was a good idea and fubared things but good.

      Worst generation ever.

      Or, as Tom Brokow might say, "reversion to the mean"

      --
      Your ad here. Ask me how!
    9. Re:Bad Patent for a Bad Invention by beowulfcluster · · Score: 1

      Obviously it's not universal to everyone in that age group, but ask anyone who's been hiring for decades- all generations have their quirks. The latest are the worst.

      Isn't that the case for all values of latest as time goes on though? ;) Imagine what the grandchildren of the millenials will be like!

    10. Re:Bad Patent for a Bad Invention by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I disagree. I remember the Coopertition First game, and yes it was a pain to keep track of who had how many points. But it also made you think a lot more. I remember a few times when the team that started scoring for the other team actually lost because they became over eager. The FIRST competition is more than just "look at our cool robots" it's problem solving, and the 3X the losing team's scoring system was just another level of problem solving. That's what makes it more interesting than a sporting event. And I like sports.

    11. Re:Bad Patent for a Bad Invention by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We always got around that by sitting way in the back with a deck of cards.

    12. Re:Bad Patent for a Bad Invention by loxosceles · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Ideally that's true, but in practice sponsoring companies with vast robotics experience will on average wipe the floor with everyone else.

      That's not to say that FIRST is stupid. Students do learn something about robotics, but they'd learn a lot more with simpler tasks that don't require a large team to get anything done. Smaller tasks means smaller teams which means more individual contribution.

      My experience with FIRST every year I was in high school went like this: A bunch of idiots from my school and a bunch of idiots from our sponsoring company (which didn't make anything even remotely resembling robots, they designed fairly static electronic and mechanical equipment) came up with the most unreliable, easy-to-break robots imaginable. They overruled the few people who had the audacity to point out that "Hey, maybe something more reliable would be better." (The typical response was, "This isn't unreliable, we can make it work.")

      Once our "team" settled on a design each year, it was very depressing watching frantic attempts to get the thing to work right. Enormous amounts of time and effort went into correcting major problems with the robot designs.

      Perhaps I'm jaded, but if students want to learn robotics, FIRST is not a good place to start. With one exception... if you know you want to do embedded systems design or programming for robotics, then you can focus on that part and do the best you can with the robot everyone else comes up with. That is valuable. The mechanical engineering aspect of FIRST robots is simply dependent on too many factors (idiots on the team, skill of corporate sponsor) for it to be very valuable as an engineering learning experience.

    13. Re:Bad Patent for a Bad Invention by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was never a student team member but I'm a HS teacher and I mentor our school's team. The first year that I was involved in FIRST, I was disgusted that it seemed that the whole thing was just a competition of who could "out-resource" their opponents. Be that financially or just getting professionals to design and build your robot. I brought this up to a long-time judge at the competition who told me that they were not in the business of EDUCATING students, rather that they were trying to INSPIRE students. I call BS. You can inspire a kid to build a robot for about $10,000 less by showing him an episode of MythBusters.

      There are plenty of other (cheaper) robotics competitions out there. Some are obvious spin-offs of FIRST but others have been around longer and are nothing like it.

    14. Re:Bad Patent for a Bad Invention by OglinTatas · · Score: 1

      but the result was same handful of teams were in the random "pool" to pull from every round

      That's like me and jury duty EVERY YEAR. Wtf. Someone needs to look at the randomization code.

    15. Re:Bad Patent for a Bad Invention by Wayfare · · Score: 1

      During my high school years my favorite time was when the GM sponsored team showed up in a brand new H2+trailer to haul their robot and accessories. My team, from a relatively small town in central Virginia rolled up in our teacher sponsor's beat down conversion van.

      What irked me about the engineer mentors was when I would overhear them say "it's doing exactly what we designed it to do" and other bits like that. My team never finished very high, but we designed and built all of it by ourselves in our school shop. We only had about 5 people that were really dedicated and about another 10 that half cared what was going on. Sure we had local engineers helping us, but it was for helpful input rather than whole ideas.

      FIRST was fun, but the sponsorship generally throws everything off balance.

    16. Re:Bad Patent for a Bad Invention by Kaboom13 · · Score: 1

      I'm specifically speaking about the system from 6-7 years ago, when this patent was filed and hte system it describes. I was the student leader of our team and a driver at that time. Between the members of my team, the members of several teams we communicated with frequently throughout the build season (we shared designs for several basic components like motor mounts and drive trains etc. with other teams freely, and gave them advice on manufacturing them.) and all the other drivers and coaches I talked with while waiting for matches, and can't think of a single person who liked the rules as they were. You mentioned last year's rules, which, by the way, are greatly improved from the system used around 2003.

      We won a regional competition, after being picked for the finals by a team whose robot had been unable to move for 75% of it's rounds. They were embarrassed to be there, because as they themselves frankly stated, they had no right to be there over the dozen teams left out of eliminations with superior robots.

      When you have been part of the compeition as long as I have (I still volunteer as a ref every year since I graduated) you realize that even though it's a great program overall, FIRST often has it's head up it's ass.

    17. Re:Bad Patent for a Bad Invention by Kaboom13 · · Score: 1

      I think we all learned more from the mistakes we made then our successes anyways. There is value in failure too, as long as you recognize it. Some of the lessons I learned have served me well but are not taught in any book. For example, I learned the importance of humility to an engineer, when our sponsor's engineers overrule the objections of our machinist (who had over 50 years of experience in the field). It was a complete disaster, and when we reexamined the math we discovered the engineers had screwed it up royally, and the machinist's intuition was correct all along. I also learned a lot about how to NOT do project management (for example, splitting into seperate specialties such as software/electrical/mechanical without good communication and a clearly defined plan).

      The goal of FIRST is not to teach you everything you need to know about robotics. It takes a lot more then you can learn after school and on weekends. Heck, you can spend 4+ years of college and still be a novice in the field. It's goal is to expose student's to science and engineering in an exciting way, and it accomplishes that.

  13. FIRST by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I believe that Dean patented this more as a way to show off what FIRST is about than so he could use it. To use his own rhetoric against him, it wouldn't be very gracious or professional to shut down another competition that is inspiring students because he has patented the idea.

  14. no Mr Robot Congeniality for 18 years by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can live with that. More seriously, though, this patent is claiming ownership of a product benefit rather than a scientific or technical mechanism. That shouldn't be allowed. A patent is not supposed to grant the inventor freedom from competition, it is supposed to protect his/her investment in the invention itself.

  15. It's a good thing it's his made-up phrase by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Otherwise, I'd say that 'gracious professionalism' doesn't apply to someone applying (and re-applying, and re-reapplying) for bullshit patents. It's his term, though, so I guess he can define it such that he avoids any irony.

    1. Re:It's a good thing it's his made-up phrase by Zordak · · Score: 1

      Taking six years and multiple rejections is NOT extraordinary for getting a patent issued. Six years is on the longer-side of normal (with 3 to 4 on the shorter side), and multiple rejections is pretty much how the USPTO does business. A lot of those rejections are just BS that the examiner tosses out because they get incentives for forcing applicans into RCEs (what? You don't know what an RCE is? Then you are just complaining about something you know nothing about). Seriously, while there are some bad patents out there, this one is not terribly egregious. It's not like he'll be able to use it to pull a BT and "sue the internet."

      --

      Today's Sesame Street was brought to you by the number e.
  16. Patents on improving sex by tepples · · Score: 1, Troll

    imagine someone having a patent on sex

    Sex has prior art: Adam + Eve = Cain. But various companies have patents on various devices and methods for improving sex, such as sildenafil citrate to increase blood flow to the penis, hypoallergenic synthetic condoms to block infectious agents, or intrauterine hormone capsules to prevent pregnancy.

  17. Patenting Patents anyone? by betasam · · Score: 0, Redundant

    What remains to be patented is a method for granting patents, such as it is now. We could then charge the USPTO for each patent granted or better still deny them the rights. Gawsh!!

    --
    No Greater Friend, No Greater Enemy! (Lucius Cornelius Sulla)
  18. Not new idea, see resistance points in rankings by s-whs · · Score: 4, Interesting

    In rankings for chess (used elsewhere too), resistance points are used to break deadlocks when people have scored the same. This is mostly of use in incomplete competitions as when everyone plays everyone, the results of this are far less important because true playing strength will eventually come out.

    When I was programming reversi/othello programs ca. 1985-1989 I saw a phenomenon where in e.g. a field of 12 programs, and 6 games each program played, ranking by points was sometimes grossly unjust, so I decided to experiment with a matrix multiplication method where a matrix of results * vector of players strengths should give the player 's strength again and one could (hopefully) iteratively obtain the right values. This had the problem of some values converging to zero, but the idea was ok (strength from a certain iteration on gave the right intuitive results where players with higher scores could still be ranked lower because they mainly played lesser opponents. I never worked it out such that it always worked. The idea seemed (and still seems) right though.

    Anyway, this sort of idea seems the same as Kamen's, namely that ones score gets higher the higher the opponents score. This is again obvious from thinking about a limited number of rounds, and thinking of resistance points, so I cannot understand why anyone should be able to patent this. It may not be obvious to a layman, but if you dive into ranking stuff, this idea is not an invention.

    Then again, perhaps my idea in the 1980s was invention worthy :)

    1. Re:Not new idea, see resistance points in rankings by evanbd · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Your method is really just a somewhat inefficient way of finding eigenvectors. Eigenvectors make a lot of sense to use there, but you can be more efficient about the details of finding them. Looked at from that angle, it also becomes clear why your solution didn't always converge (and, in fact, why it *couldn't* always converge).

    2. Re:Not new idea, see resistance points in rankings by Tony+Hoyle · · Score: 1

      Sounds similar to a golf handicap. That was invented (in a simpler form) in 1850.

    3. Re:Not new idea, see resistance points in rankings by s-whs · · Score: 1

      Your method is really just a somewhat inefficient way of finding eigenvector

      I knew about eigenvectors/values etc., what I'm describing is just one method of doing this, and I'm describing it in this way because it's probably the easiest way to convey the ideas behind it (which I think are trivial, but it's best to keep thing as simple as possible to describe it to people who may not have had this stuff in school or at university (in NL I already learnt this stuff in school). The real 'problem' was changing it (the idea/method) so it would always converge properly, which wouldn't be the simple eigenvector method.

    4. Re:Not new idea, see resistance points in rankings by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Those elements with weights converging to zero form a subset that is dominated by others. Google PageRank has the same situation. Dominated subset has to be reordered separately.

    5. Re:Not new idea, see resistance points in rankings by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      o I cannot understand why anyone should be able to patent this.

      He patented it in a very specific case. There were eight restrictions that all had to be met for his patent to be applicable. One was that it had to be a competition where 4+ robots were competing. Another was that it was that the teams were students.

      In other words, the patent seems to be on "running the scoring system of FRIST" instead of "ranking based on opponents strength, as a principle."

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  19. Seems like a patent on math to me by swillden · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Systems like that (and proofs about them) are a corner of game theory. I guess since it lacks any proof of efficacy it's not valid math and is therefore patentable??

    If so, that would mean that if someone mathematically proves (or disproves) that the system meets its goals, then it becomes a mathematical conjecture and therefore unpatentable!

    I think I'm going to file a patent on game that achieves its goals if and only if P=NP.

    --
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  20. The box is locked the lights are on... by VinylRecords · · Score: 0, Offtopic
  21. Dance Aerobics != prior art by tepples · · Score: 2, Informative

    Nintendo had the Power Pad way before Dance Dance Revolution was even a twinkle in anybody's eye.

    Konami engineers didn't invent the dance pad, but they did invent the use of "arrows", or marks that move in parallel tracks toward a receptor to direct the player to step on a corresponding sensor. Dance Aerobics (1987) didn't have arrows in the sense that DDR does.

  22. Beatmania and Guitar Freaks by tepples · · Score: 1

    Isn't Guitar Hero & Rockband pretty much Dance Dance Revolution. But instead of a stomp pad you have instruments?

    That means they're more like Konami's Beatmania, Guitar Freaks, and Drummania. Guitar Hero is licensed by Konami.

  23. Good But Hardly New by DynaSoar · · Score: 4, Informative

    "It is claimed that this ranking system promotes the made up phrases 'coopertition' and 'gracious professionalism.'"

    The ranking system is an excellent piece of game theory. In fact it's worth a Nobel prize. Specifically John Nash's. The system is based on the subset of the Nash Equilibrium http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nash_equilibrium in which the players cooperate to maximize overall success. It was characterized in the 'nobody go for the blond' scene in "A Beautiful Mind". Despite suffering from schizophrenia, Nash managed to get across a novel concept that contradicted the basic tenets of economics without making up goofy names.

    --
    "I may be synthetic, but I'm not stupid." -- Bishop 341-B
    1. Re:Good But Hardly New by camperdave · · Score: 4, Funny

      Nash managed to get across a novel concept that contradicted the basic tenets of economics without making up goofy names.

      No, he just made up goofy people.

      --
      When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
    2. Re:Good But Hardly New by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      It was characterized in the 'nobody go for the blond' scene in "A Beautiful Mind".

      That scene destoryed 1000 minds, precisly because that's not a Nash equilibrium. One should try to get the blonde, and the others should go for the brunettes.

      Second, the ranking system is not an example of game theory. Game theory explains how to win inside the system; it doesn't define the system itself.

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    3. Re:Good But Hardly New by againjj · · Score: 1

      The system is based on the subset of the Nash Equilibrium http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nash_equilibrium in which the players cooperate to maximize overall success. It was characterized in the 'nobody go for the blond' scene in "A Beautiful Mind".

      The movie was wrong. That is not a Nash Equilibrium. A Nash Equilibrium is where everyone knows everyone else's choices, and no one participant can improve his own result by changing his choice while the other participants do not change theirs. A strong equilibrium (versus a weak equilibrium) is where every participant will actually worsen his result if that participant changes his choice.

      The movie was wrong because after everyone in the group has decided to go after a brunette, then any single participant can improve his result by switching his choice from picking up a brunette to picking up the blonde.

  24. Condorcet by tepples · · Score: 2, Informative

    Also the current ranking algorithm uses the loser's score as a means of Strength of Schedule. It is a secondary ranking to points derived from WLT, 2 for a win, 1 for a tie, 0 for a loss. It is extremely difficult to find any other way to create a secondary ranking criteria because both your team members and opponents change throughout the competition.

    There is one method of ranking similar to Condorcet method, where a result of X defeats Y is counted as a vote for X over Y. But Google appears to have the exclusive license on that.

  25. That's PageRank by tepples · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I decided to experiment with a matrix multiplication method where a matrix of results * vector of players strengths should give the player 's strength again and one could (hopefully) iteratively obtain the right values.

    Did you use or describe this method publicly prior to 1998? If so, what you did could help invalidate the PageRank patent.

    1. Re:That's PageRank by s-whs · · Score: 2, Interesting

      That's PageRank

      Really? So I jest my idea might be worth a patent, and it was ;-)

      I decided to experiment with a matrix multiplication method where a matrix of results * vector of players strengths should give the player 's strength again and one could (hopefully) iteratively obtain the right values.

      Did you use or describe this method publicly prior to 1998? If so, what you did could help invalidate the PageRank patent.

      Well, I did the following in 1988 (or perhaps early 1989): I went to visit someone I hadn't seen in a long time, and told him about some things that interested me such as programming Reversi/Othello. I took with me various docs including a page from HCC nieuwsbrief (dutch computer club magazine) about a tournament for Reversi programs (from 1987 IIRC, I still have the magazine so I can check and scan it so everyone can see why I thought normal ranking wasn't good enough but that something like resistance-points (=sum of points of the opponent) should be included in some way) and I asked him:

      "What do you think about the ranking of these programs?"

      He studied them for a bit, and concluded, as I did, that one of the higher ranked programs should be ranked lower. I then explained my idea. If that sort of thing is considered making it public, and enough to invalidate a patent, then yes, I did mention it publicly. I'm not sure in how much detail I went about explaining it, for example the iterations (stopping after a certain number gave good results, but convergence was not an option as I mentioned about. This was also why I didn't use exact methods to find the eigenvector.

      But you need to remember: this was ca. 21 years ago, I think I still have the papers/calculations somewhere with my ideas for the reversi program (evaluation functions etc.), but I will have to dig it all out. Perhaps I don't have it any more. I doubt people I discussed it with will have remembered... Also, I didn't publish in a magazine or something like that, as it just seemed too trivial. If I had had internet access at the time, I might have published the idea then via say email .

      But even if I can find the papers again, then there still wouldn't be much proof of 'public' description as the people I told it to probably don't remember it.

      I will think about it some more (whom I told it to etc.) and try to dig up what I wrote down at the time.

    2. Re:That's PageRank by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      PageRank is based on finding eigenvectors. Weighing alternatives using the eigenvector approach is in fact much older than Google PageRank. Saaty and AHP come to my mind. There are probably earlier uses.

    3. Re:That's PageRank by pwfffff · · Score: 1

      Posting in possibly historic thread. :D

  26. FIRST's G22 rule by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    As a student competitor in FIRST Robotics competition for the past three years, I have some experience with FIRST and its rules. What happened this year has made many question whether FIRST rewards winning or if it is just trying to design games where nobody's feelings get hurt.

    This year's FRC game was called Lunacy. Two teams of three robots tried to score special balls in trailers pulled by opposing robots. Overall the game was well received in the FIRST community except for a certain rule. The rule in question stated that if one alliance doubled or tripled the opposing alliances score, they would lose a certain game piece (and therefore some ability to score) in their next match.

    Some like that rule saying that it added strategy because blowing out the opponents would be counted productive. Also, those people said that the rule helped emphasize that running up the score is not in line with "Gracious Professionalism."

    Most people, however, found "G22" to be quite stupid. The lack of reliable real-time scoring meant that the drivers and coaches would often not know what the score was, defeating any strategic depth it may have added. Furthermore, the concept that you can be punished for doing too well in competition was something many found ridiculous.

    This whole incident has made me question whether FIRST Robotics can be considered a serious competitive game. Dean Kamen himself has urged competitors in FIRST to garner more media coverage for the competition. Until teams are no longer punished for doing too well, I don't think most media outlets or anyone else can take the competition too seriously.

    1. Re:FIRST's G22 rule by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most people, however, found "G22" to be quite stupid. The lack of reliable real-time scoring meant that the drivers and coaches would often not know what the score was, defeating any strategic depth it may have added. Furthermore, the concept that you can be punished for doing too well in competition was something many found ridiculous.

      More so, if a poor robot was teamed with two outstanding robots who ended up tripling the other alliances score, that robot would then carry to their next match not only their poor robot, but the penalty of lost game pieces. There were too many ways that this rule would end up hurting the wrong teams. FIRST seems to have a history of poorly thought out ideas meant to even the playing field and promote cooperation between competing teams.

  27. MMORPG Prior Art by YouDoNotWantToKnow · · Score: 1

    So whole point of the rules is that if your opponents has better track record (higher LEVEL), you get more points (EXPERIENCE) for beating him? Oh WoW, how original.

    1. Re:MMORPG Prior Art by Mr.+Freeman · · Score: 1

      You have absolutely no idea how this game works. None at all. There is no track record and no experience points. Nothing even remotely similar to that.

      --
      -1 disagree is not a modifier for a reason. -1 troll, flaimbait, redundant, overrated are NOT acceptable substitutes.
  28. Interesting by Ksempac · · Score: 1

    I never heard before of the FIRST competition. From what i get from Wikipedia, robot are radio-controlled (6 weeks to make an autonomous robot would be quite a miracle)?
    However, that scoring system seems really convoluted.
    In France, there is a quite popular robotic competition, the French Cup of Robotics. In 1998 they extended it to become an European competition called Eurobot www.eurobot.org . Robots are smaller but autonomous.
    This mean you have to get reliable sensors (beware of infrared sensors under 1000 watts lights !), and a very reliable IA.
    Because of that, teams work a full year to get a working robots, and many can't pass the homologation (that ensures the robot is able to score at least one point under optimal condition). Moreover, during the competition many robots won't start at the beginning of a game or end up stuck in a corner because of bad input from a sensor, collision, or glitch in the IA.
    Therefore, a robot who can reliably score on every one of his 5 qualifying matches as a good chance of reaching the final 16. Best robots win :). No need for a strange scoring system.

    1. Re:Interesting by beowulfcluster · · Score: 1

      Personally I liked Robot Wars more. The robot who lives, wins. That's a simple scoring system too.

    2. Re:Interesting by Mr.+Freeman · · Score: 1

      There is always an autonomous period in each game. Usually 15-20 seconds. Then it flips over to teleoperated mode. Entire match comes to about 2.5 minutes.

      Of course, 20 seconds is never enough to actually do anything useful, so the only teams that bother with an auto mode are the teams that have experts in the area.

      --
      -1 disagree is not a modifier for a reason. -1 troll, flaimbait, redundant, overrated are NOT acceptable substitutes.
  29. This guy just invented hot water by Permutation+Citizen · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Tie breaker using opponent score in tournament exists from a while.

    SOS: Sum Of Opponents' Scores.
    SODOS: Sum Of Defeated Opponents' Scores.

    http://senseis.xmp.net/?TieBreaker

  30. So basically by Talla · · Score: 1

    he's patented how you make people help the competition? Seems like a pretty ironic patent.

  31. Huh? by Theaetetus · · Score: 1

    Forget obviousness. Aren't patents supposed to have industrial application?

    Since when? Patents are required to be useful, but that's it. Usefulness can extend to entertainment, or enhancing aesthetics, or anything else. Where did you get the idea that they had to have industrial application?

    1. Re:Huh? by pjt33 · · Score: 1

      That's the phrase used by the rest of the English-speaking world and the TRIPS agreement. In the words of a USPTO patent attorney, "Industrial application is essentially the same as our utility standard set forth in 35 USC 101".

    2. Re:Huh? by Theaetetus · · Score: 1

      That's the phrase used by the rest of the English-speaking world and the TRIPS agreement. In the words of a USPTO patent attorney, "Industrial application is essentially the same as our utility standard set forth in 35 USC 101".

      The utility standard in 35 USC 101 just means that it has to be useful for something... But, as I said, that can include use in entertainment. Simply put, the invention has to provide some benefit to the public.

  32. Segue by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    He invented a method of fading one bit of music into another, but he can't even spell it? What a 'tard!

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  33. The term "gracious professionalism" by chroma · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I've volunteered with FIRST every now and then when I'm able to.

    The phrase "gracious professionalism" always struck me as both condescending to the contestants and unnecessary.

    We have the perfectly good term "sportsmanship" which means pretty much the same thing. At various other robotics competitions (BattleBots, Robot Battles, etc.) nearly everyone I've met has been a good sport, and likeable too. Going on and on about "gracious professionalism" at the various official functions implies that the contestants are unable to figure it out on their own and thus need to have it drilled into their heads.

    --

    Your design to a real part online: Big Blue Saw
  34. Obligatory by alexo · · Score: 1

    An "ill conceived principal" that has existed for 2000 years

    [citation needed]

    1. Re:Obligatory by Theaetetus · · Score: 1

      An "ill conceived principal" that has existed for 2000 years

      [citation needed]

      "encouragement was held out to all who should discover any new refinement in luxury, the profits arising from which were secured to the inventor by patent for the space of a year." - 500 BC.

      Charles Anthon, A Classical Dictionary: Containing An Account Of The Principal Proper Names Mentioned in Ancient Authors, And Intended To Elucidate All The Important Points Connected With The Geography, History, Biography, Mythology, And Fine Arts Of The Greeks And Romans Together With An Account Of Coins, Weights, And Measures, With Tabular Values Of The Same, Harper & Bros, 1841, page 1273.

    2. Re:Obligatory by alexo · · Score: 1

      "encouragement was held out to all who should discover any new refinement in luxury, the profits arising from which were secured to the inventor by patent for the space of a year. "

      (emphasis mine).

      Smart guys, those Greeks.

  35. Hmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ummm. Well. Jon McEnroe, from the 70's, maybe? Or...

    Okay. Good point.

  36. The problem with your thinking (alas)... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    is that math (currently) *IS* patentable. That was decided way back -- the 80's? -- and has made, for example, RSA a boatload of money. It really falls in line with the whole software patent thing. Some day, we'll shirk ourselves of this, and good riddance. I just hope I live to see the day. I've got about 35 years left, so here's hoping.

  37. TMization: Patent to be applied for on mispellings by pribut · · Score: 1

    I want to patent the concept of mispelling and making up words. This patent will include both deliberate mispellings and makeups such as "coopertition" and confabulations which arise from the deep subconscious.

    While some are aware of the term "Spoonerism", Spooner is long dead and not around to patent this. Since many of these are also associated with Trademarks, we could call it TMization.