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."
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?
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
Here's one for ya Dean... "doucheventor"
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.
"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.
Since when does Superman need to ride around on a damn two-wheeled electric breadbox?
He'd be all set.
Sadly, neither irony nor sarcasm were used in the making of this post.
You cannot copyright a game, but you are allowed to patent the rules? For shame!
Ideas should be free. The idea that one can own an idea is, I believe, an ill conceived principal.
Perhaps I should patent "patents".
The famous Spaced clip
Alliances?
(I wish he'd licensed this to Dancing With The Stars!)
OK a new size TV
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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)
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
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.
Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battlebots
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.
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.
"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
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.
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.
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.
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.
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)? :). No need for a strange scoring system.
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
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
he's patented how you make people help the competition? Seems like a pretty ironic patent.
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?
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."
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
[citation needed]
Ummm. Well. Jon McEnroe, from the 70's, maybe? Or...
Okay. Good point.
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.
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.