Microsoft Files For 3 Parallel Processing Patents
theodp writes "Microsoft may have been a Johnny-come-lately when it comes to parallel programming, but that's not stopping the software giant from trying to patent it. This week, the USPTO revealed that Microsoft has three additional parallel-processing patents pending — 1. Partitioning and Repartitioning for Data Parallel Operations, 2. Data Parallel Searching, and 3. Data Parallel Production and Consumption. Informing the USPTO that 'Software programs have been written to run sequentially since the beginning days of software development,' Microsoft adds there's been a '[recent] shift away from sequential execution toward parallel execution.' Before they grant the patents, let's hope the USPTO gets a second opinion on the novelty of Microsoft's parallel-processing patent claims."
Johnny-come-lately? Compared to what others have done in the fields of parallel processing in terms of programming...they are light years ahead. Try programming in linux for one day and then throw parallel processing into it. then throw in some data. then tell me who the "Johnny-come-lately" is.
Yeah, this is really just what we need: for somebody to come along and encumber the future of parallel processing with a metric fuckload of patents. Thanks, Microsoft!
[b.belong('us') for b in bases if b.owner() == 'you']
Rule 1: If I don't patent it, someone else will -- no matter how obvious or trivial.
Rule 2: If someone else patents it -- even if invalid -- and I try to use it, it's off to court for years and years and lots of money.
The game: The one with the most patents wins.
If you don't like the rules, you have two choices.
Choice 1: Don't play the game.
Choice 2: Get the rules changed.
Criticizing Microsoft or anyone else for playing the game by the rules is just whining.
Got problems with the anti trust laws? Don't know how to deal with it? Simple: patent stuff. That way you get a legal monopoly and stifle the competition the easy way.
These kind of patents serve no purpose other than to prevent competing organisations from developing useful goods and services. They hold back innovation and stifle competition.
It is not as though others would not have come up with the same solutions (and most probably had already).
So why would politicians allow this state of affairs to continue? Who is lobbying to keep the patent system the way it is and maybe even extend it? Who benefits? (hint: lawyers and shareholders in large corporations - that is to say people who are already wealthy, trying to make sure they get an even bigger slice of the cake)
i think that Microsoft's patents are shallow and pedantic.
Google alone must have prior art on just about every single claim in all 3 patents.
Hopefully Google will also have the guts to bash MS over the metaphorical skull with a ton of overlapping patents. That way MS gets their ass handed to them -- by their worst enemy no less -- and meanwhile the patent examiner who was responsible for granting these also gets reassigned to review patents on toilets and PVC pipe.