Nokia Claims Patent Violations in Most Apple Products
An anonymous reader writes with an extract from this Associated Press story, as carried by The Globe and Mail: "Nokia is broadening its legal fight with Apple, saying almost all of the company's products violate its patents, not just the iPhone. Nokia Corp. said Tuesday that it has filed a complaint against Apple Inc. with the US International Trade Commission. The Finnish phone maker says Apple's iPhone, iPods and computers all violate its intellectual property rights."
Apple has been patenting things for a long time. If they look really hard, I suspect they will find hundreds of patents that Nokia is using without compensation.
These appear to be patents against actual physical technologies, so it ain't the same thing as software patents. But please, do continue to show what a fucking retard you are.
The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
No, I will continue my anti-patent stance, thanks. I hope these suits result in a massive reform of the patent system, but I have a feeling I will be disappointed.
Palm trees and 8
We are only for Nokia suing Apple because it brings light to why the patent system is broken. In other words things only change when the heavy hitters like Microsoft get hit with enough patent lawsuits, that they change their mind on patents and lobby to have them overturned.
I highly suspect Apple will soon pull out their patent portfolio and this will quickly turn into a total mess. Oh well, bound to happen sooner or later.
Dear Nokia,
I hope you can show clear proof that you've continually tried to engage Apple - throughout the production of each of their infringing products ... to re-iterate your position. If you have not, I hope you LOSE this case. If you did, you deserve to WIN this case. Failure to protect your patents until they are well established should be automatic disqualification of a patent.
Sincerely,
The Internet Community
Does this mean that Steve Jobs will also lose person of the decade?
-- if you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine
The old "All your base are belong to us" way of technology progression.
One of the patents that Apple is countersuing on is this one:
No. 6,239,795 B1: Pattern and color abstraction in a graphical user interface
Sounds to me like rabid software patenting.
Source- http://www.informationweek.com/blog/main/archives/2009/12/apple_nokia_sto.html
I clicked the link and got six sentences. Is this what qualifies as slashdot newsworthy these days?
Seems to be up to his neck in legal alligators lately.
Cellphone search without warrant declared illegal by Ohio Supreme Court
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/26/opinion/26sat2.html
And Steve's droogies aren't even cops.
Get the popcorn.
or are they going to make excuses about how this is okay because it's going after Apple
It may not be ok, but it sure is ironic. So Ha Ha Ha Ha.
However what I just said is irrelevant. At the end of the day, these two companies will undoubtedly just do a broad ranging cross-licensing agreement like most big tech players. That will further serve to stifle any potential future competition from people who are not in the cabal of giants protected by their mutual patent moats.
The two are not necessarily exclusive. If you hate patents, having the big patent supporters beat each other to death with them is a decent step to getting rid of them. The best possible outcome would be a multiple hundred billion volley of lawsuits between all of the biggies until they bring each other to their knees. If they die, we win. If they wise up and back away from supporting patents, we win. If they clog the courts so full that they can't function, we win. Triple bonus points if they all decide the real problem is the USPTO and they sue it to death.
New meme, trademark confusion. Be sure to prominently mix and match trademarks when talking to various companies. Perhaps we can get a corporate world war started :-)
Are you sure? The article isn't much longer than the summary; at this time there is not enough information to draw any conclusions.
Are you going to stab your next victim, or are you going to shoot them?
Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
Why is it ok to patent something physical, but not ok to patent software? I have never understood the distinction.
Is the work done by an electirical engineer more difficult than that done by a software engineer? Is it more valuable? Why is it ok to patent the implementation of an algorithm in hardware but not ok to patent the implementation of the same algorithm in software?
This is not a troll post, I legitimately do not understand why the distinction should be between hardware and software. Isn't it better to just have the distinction be between good and non-obvious vs bad and obvious? Do we say that all software patents should be invalid simply because of obvious patents like amazon's one click? Isn't that a problem with the obviousness criteria and not the underlying makeup (be it software or hardware) of the patent?
Lawyers love patents and the cases they make... I think they are the only ones who are the "winners"
Judging by market share, Nokia is number one with Symbian. Judging by operating system technology, Nokia is number one with Maemo. Who exactly do they need to catch up with and how?
My Sig: SEGV
Shouldn't you be posting on bingdot.com or whatever the fuck Microsoft's Slashdot clone is called?
Mod me down, my New Earth Global Warmingist friends!
(If Apple used Nokia Patents without Authorization) Does Apple have no blame for using and profiting off another companies R&D?
Spelling and Grammar errors have been added to this post for your enjoyment
Most probable scenario: cross license deal.
sig intentionally left blank
It makes you all sound like indecisive pussies. Just an observation. I've noticed that Obama is particularly adept at using the passive voice, especially when things go wrong and he's left with egg on his face (which seems to be quite often).
Software engineering is done by writing code, and should be afforded protection under copyright laws, not patents.
A huge cornerstone of many open source licenses depend on their work being copyrightable, and not patentable.
Nokia has the largest market share, why do they have to catch up? The real thing is that Apple has to catch up and probably has used tecnology owned by Nokia illegally.
And at least on Slashdot we should value Nokia's hardware patents a little more than software patents. They spent real money on research. On the contrary, patenting "do something on user click" is not really that useful for the progress of human race...
Well, at least in the USA, if the "thing" being patented is something a human being could do (with an extreme surplus of time and infinite paper and pencils) then it is an abstract idea and explicitly excluded from protection. This is why, for instance, you can't patent raw mathematics like calculus.
And specifically, because computers see all software as "raw mathematics" at the hardware level, software should be excluded from patenst. [Or put another way: human beings are a 1 centi-hertz CPU, and US legal precedent excludes any activity they perform unaided from patenting.]
Do you like Japanese imports?
Litigation is a poor substitute for competition. Nokia's grasping at straws here, because they know that when the iPhone gets down around the $50 price point, they're toast.
-jcr
The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
These are not physical as you can kick them. They are physical as Nokia in Nokia has actual product using them. Nokia has actually developed heaps of technology because they were very early to market (GSM, UMTS, etc were to a large extent developed by Nokia and Ericsson), so the patents cover a lot of actual technology that's widely used.
Nokia spent heaps of money developing many of the technologies that make cell-phones work, and the rest of the industry has to pay to make of for the R&D. That way everybody gets better products; Nokia has an incentive to do the R&D because they can make back the money and the rest because they can purchase the technology cheaper.
This is an excellent example of why the patent system was developed; everybody benefits by allowing Nokia patents on their technologies.
As for Apple... Multi-touch... Well, I've worked with that for almost a decade now...
Since Nokia has not stated WHICH patents Apple has infringed, exactly how do either of you know if they are for physical or business method patents? Next you both start calling each other names? Really?
If you do have a list of which patents are involved I would love to go over them. However I was unable to find any source for that information. Nokia's official response on that question (for all sources I could check) was to the effect of, "we don't comment on the details of pending litigation."
The real matter at hand is that Nokia makes the items it patents, therefor they are not a patent troll.
The devil is in the details however, as the two companies start legal proceedings who ever is more wrong will end up paying the other in some way. Notice I said, "more wrong." My guess is that both companies do in fact, infringe upon each others patents.
Indeed, the only catagory Apple wins with in smart-phones is in the single-device category, and the blackberry 8300 series (5 devices that are essentially the same phone in different configurations) is just a hair behind the iPhone 3g. RIM has over 40% of the smartphone market, a number Apple can't touch.
Nokia does ok in the smartphone market, but their bread and butter is the general handset market, of which they control more than half of the entire market.
Apple is not the big guy in this battle, Nokia is. Apple has, what, four variations of the same phone? Nokia has thousands. They have been in the business long enough that they may well have a case against Apple computers as well, since a phone is really nothing more than a small computer anyway.
Security is mostly a superstition... Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. - Helen Keller
You must be new here.
Mod me down, my New Earth Global Warmingist friends!
Nokia has a 35% global market share. Not so good in the american market, but, nevertheless, I would not call a company that big pathetic. But as we are talking about free fall, Apple today is down by -1.19%. Nokia is up +0.31%.
Grey's Law: Any sufficiently advanced incompetence is indistinguishable from malice.
I understand what you are saying the distinction is, but I question the actual use of this distinction since it does not seem appropriate (at least to me).
If I write a program to sort a list, it is not patentable (and I'm fine with this).
If I design a series of NAND and NOR gates together that sort a list, it is patentable.
Is one harder than the other? There is software that could convert the first to the second.
So why does the medium of the patent actually matter?
Kind of a neat way to maintain high public exposure, but can it be cheaper than regular advertising? Aside from the freebie here on the front page? Only their accountants know for sure.. I gotta admit.. the drama angle plays pretty good.. cliffhangers and everything.
For justice, we must go to Don Corleone
I can tell you one patent Apple uses without even turning on iPhone. iPhone has no visible antenna right? Guess who shipped such device first and spent some years to convince people that the external antenna isn't really better than the internal one?
I correct myself. The following is a list of patents Nokia claims Apple infringed upon:
* No. 5, 634, 074 : Serial I/O device identifies itself to a computer through a serial interface during power on reset then it is being configured by the computer
* No. 6, 343, 263 B1 : Real-time signal processing system for serially transmitted data
* No. 5,915,131 : Method and apparatus for handling I/O requests utilizing separate programming interfaces to access separate I/O services
* No. 5,555,369: Method of creating packages for a pointer-based computer system
* No. 6,239,795 B1: Pattern and color abstraction in a graphical user interface
* No. 5,315,703: Object-oriented notification framework system
* No. 6,189,034 B1: Method and apparatus for dynamic launching of a teleconferencing application upon receipt of a call
* No. 7,469,381, B2: List scrolling and document translation, scaling, and rotation on a touch-screen display
* No.RE 39, 486 E: Extensible, replaceable network component system
* No. 5,455,854: Object-oriented telephony system
* No. 7,383,453 B2: Conserving power by reducing voltage supplied to an instruction-processing portion of a processor
* No. 5,848,105: GMSK signal processors for improved communications capacity and quality
* No. 5, 379,431: Boot framework architecture for dynamic staged initial program load
You know that deep down, in some manner or another, Microsoft is responsible for this...
You have the right to remain sentient. If you give up the right to remain sentient, you will be elected to public office
But please, do continue to show what a fucking retard you are.
Ah yes.. most insightful, definitely livens things up.. just like the good ol' AOL days :)
For justice, we must go to Don Corleone
If he lost that, he'd clearly be in the running for the peace prize. Even if he did nothing for it.
Patents are preferable to copyrights for code as patents are of limited duration and copyrights are effectively unlimited.
Can you be Even More Awesome?!
Judging by market share, Nokia is number one with Symbian. Judging by operating system technology, Nokia is number one with Maemo. Who exactly do they need to catch up with and how?
They need to catch up with just how much ROI their competition is making. Apple don't need to dominate market share in order to get a huge return. Nokia should be envious of that (and apparently are).
Nokia has gone from 40 dollar in 2008 down to 10 dollar as of now. Apple has gone from 180 to 210 in the same period. I call the 40 to 10 drop a fall. And the reason I call them pathetic is of there loss combined with there claims. I can all ready smell Darl McBride in the shadows..
In order to form an immaculate member of a flock of sheep one must, above all, be a sheep.
Nokia has finally opened the hurt bag on itself. They are one of the biggest patent trolls out there and have been bullying all the other phone makers for years and no one had the patent portfolio to stand up to them before. They just might get their products banned for this one. Their usual strategy is to discredit the other manufacturer rather than out compete them and if that fails then the patent hammer gets them.
Why bother
You can't generally patch hardware... so it is, in essence harder. You can create, change a software implementation with ease, and pretty much anything in software isn't unique to those practiced in the art, which belies the other point of patents.
Michael J. Ryan - tracker1.info
So why does the medium of the patent actually matter?
This is an interesting question, and my take on it is this...
The malleability of the medium has a whole lot to say about the economic cost the patent system imposes on works created in the medium.
As our tools for manipulating the physical world in an automated fashion become more precise, cheaper and more flexible the physical world is going to start having the same kinds of problems with the patent system imposing an unacceptable burden that it currently has with software.
Need a Python, C++, Unix, Linux develop
Nokia has maintained its dominance by patent trolling. It's a way of doing business for them. No body with a big enough patent pile has challenged them yet.
Why bother
Won't happen, and here is why: It is not in their best interests to risk losing the power that having patent warchests give them against new players attempting to enter the market. So instead what will happen is that after much saber rattling the lawyers from Nokia and Apple will get together and sign a cross licensing agreement covering any and all of the above patents, thus allowing both to keep their patent warchests while Nokia will get a nice check.
Just look at deals between AMD and Intel, ATI and Nvidia, for examples. While we can be sure that with patent warchests as large as the mega companies have that they are no doubt infringing on each others patents in probably hundreds of cases, by signing large CYA cross licensing agreements with each other they can continue business as usual and help to keep out new players. Just as I'm sure that along with that fat 1.25 billion dollar check Intel cut AMD to drop the anti-trust lawsuit there was wording in the settlement that lets AMD not worry about infringing on plenty of Intel patents. It is just the way the big corps roll sadly.
ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
Judging by market share, Nokia is number one with Symbian. Judging by operating system technology, Nokia is number one with Maemo. Who exactly do they need to catch up with and how?
Coolness. Iphone has taken the coolness lead. Nokia and Blackberry (despite superior technology) are far behind in coolness & marketing.
No one camps out to buy a Blackberry (even though I love mine) or Nokia.
Nokia has no compelling smart phone offering, and that's where the market is headed. Their current market share -- yes, the largest of any single manufacturer -- is somewhat immaterial on that basis alone.
Dog is my co-pilot.
patents on software are undefineable because all of the functionality has in fact already been "invented" ... API's and the like, so what u r in effect doing is taking building blocks (a la lego) and assembling them in preconcieved ways (that is implied because the functionality was already invented by someone, you have merely implemented it). Now if you made a new computer from scratch or an API from a language you made yourself, then yes that would deserve many patents.
I thought those were the patents that Apple held. So these are the ones Apple is claiming Nokia infrienged. Source: http://www.appleinsider.com/articles/09/12/11/apple_files_countersuit_against_nokia.html
Say NO to unpaid Internships!
The issue Apple faces is that the patents Nokia were originally pursuing were patents that every single other mobile manufacturer was happy to license.
Actually no. Nokia wanted Apple to give them much more than "every other single" manufacturer. Nokia wanted to charge Apple 3x the fair and reasonable rate they charged others. They also wanted free access to Apple tech. Here are just a few of Apple's complaints:
...In or about May 2009, Nokia demanded a royalty approximately three times as much as the royalty proposed the prior spring, which was itself in excess of a F/RAND rate, as well as “picks’ to Apple’s non-standards-essential patents.
Article 81. In Particular, in or about the spring of 2008, Nokia demanded that, as part of it’s compensation for licensing Nokia’s portfolio of purported essential patents, Apple must grant Nokia a license to a particular number of Apple non-standards-essential patents...Apple immediately rejected the proposal and reiterated Apple’s position that Nokia’s F/RAND obligations required it to licence Nokia’s purportedly essential technologies.
Article 82.
Naughty Nokia. Go to your room.
That isn't really true.
Just as software is a specific implementation using a predefined language, a CPU is just a specific arrangement of predefined (and well known) logic gates (AND, OR, NAND, etc). They are both built from basic building blocks defined elsewhere.
By your criteria, anything above the simplest Turing complete CPU would be unpatentable, since all of the functionality would already be defined.
So Nokia owned patents for annoying advertisements and cornering the smug douchebag market?
No, copyrights will not prevent you of implementing similar thing from scratch, patents can prevent you from doing anything similar.
Software patents are more like patenting the idea of a mouse trap rather than a specific apparatus for trapping mouses.
Nokia has the largest market share, why do they have to catch up? The real thing is that Apple has to catch up and probably has used tecnology owned by Nokia illegally.
Why does Apple have to catch up? Apple makes a much greater profit margin on every phone sold than Nokia does. Nokia has a high marketshare, but low profits. Seems that Apple is actually winning this one.
... and then they built the supercollider.
=P
I almost corrected my self. Does anyone have the list of Nokia patents in question?
True, but there is the hope that patent trolls will sufficiently damage the big corps. The trolls aren't interested in cross licensing.
Apple is not the big guy in this battle, Nokia is. Apple has, what, four variations of the same phone? Nokia has thousands. They have been in the business long enough that they may well have a case against Apple computers as well, since a phone is really nothing more than a small computer anyway.
That may be true, but Apple has enough cash to buy a majority in Nokia.
While I despise IP, trademark, copyright, et al... in this case.......
YOU GO NOKIA!
Finally some one is going to put an end to the crapple cult!
YOU GO NOKIA! ! ! ! ! !
Hey Xerox, can you PLEASE SUE ms and crapple over their GUI's! We know the PARC is the TRUE ORIGINATOR of the mouse and windowed GUI!.
GO NOKIA GO! !
1311393600 - Back to Black
Nokia's market cap is $47b and Apple's is $188b.
Just sayin'.
Why does Apple have to catch up? Apple makes a much greater profit margin on every phone sold than Nokia does.
Apple fans overpaying and ensuring high profit margins? Inconceivable!
So will the next Apple product be called the "iSteal.IP?"
I think the gp answers his own question. Namely that the work designing a physical device is different, because any 9th grader with an IQ > 120 could write any of the code that is out there.
Ah, so Nokia surely doesn't get access to patent portfolios of other phone manufacturers? Under rules which they uniformly deem to be RAND?
Reality Distortion Field is strong today...
One that hath name thou can not otter
one acronym: FPGA
A set of gates of which you can change the connections on the fly.
Current FPGAs are large enough to implement quite large systems with many algorithms. There are even FPGA like devices that work in the analogue domain.
And to be honest, having started designing for an FPGA, it not that more difficult than software. In fact the simulation software for FPGAs includes debugging tools that puts software debugging to shame.
It seems obvious that their profit margins would be higher if they are not paying royalties on all the patents they are using. Building a business model on this seems a little foolish though.
"Mouses" are input devices.
"Mice" are rodents.
All this are common sense and as such should be dismissed. Actually all patents should be dismissed and abolished altogether
2 big companies playing tic tac toe on a large scale. it will always be a cats game and they will always play again. does no one learn the lessons of WOPR!
Have you actually used Maemo? Technically, Maemo is the bee's knees, but as far as usability goes, they have a LONG way to go. Responding to your rhetorical question, it's in Maemo's usability that Nokia has a lot of catching up to do.
"I like systems, their application excepted", George Sand (French)
It seems obvious that their profit margins would be higher if they are not paying royalties on all the patents they are using.
That doesn't make any sense. Nokia doesn't pay for the patents it owns, so how could the difference in profit margin be about patents?
... and then they built the supercollider.
Indeed, although even in the smartphone market, Nokia are still at 40% - they are dominant at all levels.
"Smartphone" is ill-defined anyway, and the Iphone doesn't really belong in that category (Apple fans: give me a definition of smartphone that includes the Iphone, but doesn't include most feature phones? It can't even multitask, for god's sake).
Too bad I don't have points to mark you as an idiot for posting Apple's Patents and calling them Nokia's.
Nokia has actually developed heaps of technology because they were very early to market (GSM, UMTS, etc were to a large extent developed by Nokia and Ericsson), so the patents cover a lot of actual technology that's widely used.
Sure - but how would those be violated by Apple products beside the iPhone? Do they cover WLAN too?
Yep, Apple are successful at selling overpriced products to a niche number of people, and making money from that. News at eleven. This is about as relevant as that ridiculous "Apple are the number one PC seller for really expensive PCs" story we had a while back. I bet Amiga do a good profit too.
But the rest of us are more interested in what 95% of the market are buying, not niche players like Apple.
It can't even multitask, for god's sake
Yeah, but neither can Apple Macintoshes, unlike my trusty Amiga 500. Something to do with its handle based heap management I think.
it is the design that infringes
True. That's why it was so amusing to see Apple copying the LG's Prada phone design for the Iphone.
Da Blog
Nokia's market cap is $47b and Apple's is $188b.
Just sayin'.
Apple has $34b in cash reserves right now. If anything goes wrong with this, they just do a hostile takeover. Is that the acquisition you guys have been waiting for?
He was being ironical.
Apple is not a GSM Association member. They had nothing to do with developing GSM, and so don't have claim to the favorable RAND terms available to GSM Association members.
If Nokia wanted more in exchange for the use of their patents than other GSM patent holders do, then that is their right. If Apple doesn't want to pay Nokia's terms, they need to find a way around the patents. If that's what they did, then Apple will win. If they didn't, well, you don't get to just say "Your patent isn't important" and ignore it.
Claiming that other Apple products violate their patents is just more posturing to try and force a settlement on terms that are very unfavorable to Apple.
That's assuming Apple products don't violate Nokia patents. If they do violate the patents, then Nokia's position is completely legitimate, and Apple refused to license Nokia's patents and went ahead and infringed them.
Security is mostly a superstition... Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. - Helen Keller
If you haven't noticed, cell phones are slowly but surely morphing into computers. My bet is that the majority of phones sold 5 years from now will be "smart phones" - the area where Apple is currently excelling and Nokia is currently lagging. Being kind of yesterday's technology is pretty meaningless.
Kiteboarding Gear Mention slashdot and get 10% off!
We stopped talking about MilF's years ago son, we just fuck them these days...
But if you are 14, I guess iMILF's are the only thing you get...
If you mod me down, I *will* introduce you to my sister!
Uh, no, those are the patents Apple claims Nokia is infringing on. Not the other way around.
It can multitask. It does that very well. Apple doesn't allow other apps to multitask, and purposely didn't create a way for other apps to because it saves battery, and it prevents apps from taking over the phone.
Judging by market share, Nokia is number one with Symbian. Judging by operating system technology, Nokia is number one with Maemo. Who exactly do they need to catch up with and how?
~80% of all profits comes from the Smart phone market only. Gee. Who is winning that market? It sure as hell isn't Nokia.
o look, a homo.
You've long been able to patent processes and not just specific implementations of a process, at least in the US (and possibly other places, I haven't done the research to know). And by "long" I mean "more than a century" -- there was a USSC case involving a process for refining flour that addressed just this distinction (Cochane v. Deemer, 1877). The majority opinion there says "A process may be patentable, irrespective of the particular form of the instrumentality used.”
So what I want to know is why processes implemented in software are different than processes implement in other hardware, bearing in mind that the later have been eligible for patents for at least 132 years. Or if software and hardware implementations of processes aren't different, what in society has changed to that would make us want to overturn our traditional patent rules.
But the rest of us are more interested in what 95% of the market are buying, not niche players like Apple.
Talk about "News at Eleven"! What an amazing insight you have!
... and then they built the supercollider.
Why is it ok to patent something physical, but not ok to patent software? I have never understood the distinction.
It's a lot easier to patent a specific method or physical design than it is to patent a program. The difficulty is where do you draw the line? Like patenting a song... what if I change a single note, does your patent apply? It's trivial for someone to take a chunk of code and make periodic, trivial changes, such a swapping order of adjacent instructions, and make it physically very different without changing it at all, and that clearly would allow someone to violate your IP if that's all it took.
So having a way to make clear rules is a big factor. For instance, in music it can get down to counting the number of identical notes in a row.
Programming also has other issues that are unique. Given the restrictions of a language, the simpler a task, the fewer ways there are available to you to perform the task. Opportunities for diversity grow rapidly as the code gets more complex, but at the same time those that want to patent their code then tend to want more general interpretation because it becomes increasingly easy to make minor changes to their work and now call it your own. Very basic and very well-known tasks have a single known most-efficient method to code them - such as a bubble sort in C, that any skilled programmer could develop independently. Those must fall into the area of "obvious", which is not patentable.
I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
IQ above 120 is 6.7% of the 9th grade population at most. That is not a lot of ninth graders writing code. It should also be noted that at the college level Computer Science undergraduates have the highest drop out rate second only to Math (US only). Finally, in no way does IQ correlate to one's ability to proficiently code.
No. 7,383,453 B2: Conserving power by reducing voltage supplied to an instruction-processing portion of a processor
Wow. The degree to which this is just pure common sense is astounding. Even after reading the patent, it still seems to me like it says 'conserving power by conserving power'.
<sig> </sig>
Software patents are more like patenting the idea of a mouse trap rather than a specific apparatus for trapping mouses.
No, both of those are legitimate subject matter for a patent. If you are the first person ever to conceive of the idea of building a trap to catch mice, then you can get a broad patent on mouse traps. If mouse traps are already in the prior art, you can get a patent on your improved mouse trap. Copyright would apply to a diagram or schematic of your mouse trap. A copyright on your schematic would not prevent me from building the trap described by the schematic. It just keeps me from copying the schematic itself. But a patent on your design does keep me from making your mouse trap, regardless of whether or not I actually copy the schematic. Extrapolating out to software is not difficult and is left as an exercise for the reader.
Today's Sesame Street was brought to you by the number e.
I think you're failing to see how the steps in the process differ from physical invention: It's not that software is implemented based on predefined components, it's a question of where creativity is possible in the process (I'm using creativity in a broad sense, to include the word invention itself, and words such as 'originality' and even 'non-obviousness' when they are used to describe the patent process. I'll try to use some of those more specific terms to make this a little clearer).
As post #30588846 put it, the assembly of code is done in preconcieved ways. Someone already built a hardware framework that controls what you can create in software for a given purpose at one set of levels (essentially the bottommost levels - you can't, for example, make a deliberate spelling mistake to make a pun or coin a new word to create something novel and previously unforseen, as the system treats these as mistakes which won't execute). There are many non-obvious but still useful ways to arrange a very complex set of logic gates to make a processor, ergo that is patentable (or some parts of it are). There are no similarly non-obvious ways to arrange assembly language commands - A C, L, or ST, or even an SSCH does what it does, and its permissible uses are all documented. When you program above machine and assembly languages, you can't rearrange these to your own taste, as you can't even normally see them.
At the next set of levels, someone has created a programming language you are using. Unlike a natural language, it too is a very rigidly defined framework. Some choices may seem to be available, but there is often a precise ranking possible, in that one algorythm may be clearly superior to all others for the purpose. Doing something deliberately different is mostly also doing something deliberately inefficient, against standard, or just plain wrong. At neither of these two sets of levels can you actually do much if anything significantly creative. You also can't protect that level by patent because the legal system already forbids protecting the mathematics on which your work is based, and your implementation is a derivitive work of the sphere of math, so it can't have rights the math itself doesn't have.
Above that second set of levels, yes programming can be creative. But there, you're describing something similar to writing in a natural language. It's normally already protectable by copyright and so shouldn't gain simultanious protection from patent law. Some choices here are non-obvious, but non-obvious in more like the same way as choosing to use adjectives more sparingly and make the red-headed character be from out of state, not so much non-obvious in the 'tungsten makes a durable filament' manner.
I'm not saying I actually agree with all this, mind you. I think one of the points of both open ended scripting languages and of OOP is to make genuine creative choice available at deeper levels of the process. But, the court system is thinking of programming mostly as it was 20 or more years ago.
Who is John Cabal?
no, i was just being a non-native English writer.
A huge range of physical phones can run java j2me based software without needing to determine device configurations etc. Sun says there are about 2.5 Billion j2me/midp enabled handsets out there.
Unfortunately the various carriers then balkanized this 'code once run everywhere' capability in order to try to capture cashflow from developers (independent testing. certification, and signing anyone?) and customers (all the many app stores).
human beings are a 1 centi-hertz CPU, and US legal precedent excludes any activity they perform unaided from patenting.
Interesting. However Think about the 100s (for the sake of argument only!) it takes to boot an OS. In this time your 3GHz CPU is running approximately flat out (we'll ignore the extra cores). Since a human is a centi-hertz in your estimation one human will require 300,000,000,000 times more time to perform the same operations or just short of 1 million years. So if the task takes far longer than a single human life expectancy is it reasonable to argue that it is a task that a human being can do unaided? Personally I hate software patents but I don't think that you can defeat them with this argument - even if you tweak the numbers it will be hard to get the 5 orders of magnitude which you need.
and still maintaining a better grasp of the language than most natives
APK quotes people (including myself) without context and should not be trusted. Just thought you should know.
Apple also says Nokia wanted unreasonable license terms for the patents, including a cross-license for Apple's various iPhone device patents as part of any deal, which Apple clearly wasn't willing to do.
That Nokia wanted "unreasonable" license terms still doesn't mean that you can just ignore them because you don't like them. Apple's dead in the water on this one, and Nokia is also large enough to put up a good fight. (It would be like GM suing Audi/VW - one's larger, but both are behemoths compared to most everything else)
Apple has always played fast and loose with IP and has been merciless in exploiting it and defending it - at the same level as Microsoft and the rest of them, in fact, despite their image and PR. The question is how much are they going to fork over before it goes to court and then continue as usual(ie - throw a few hundred million in pocket change at Nokia and go on as if nothing had happened)
It was like Linus's example during the initial phases of the SCO trial about certain low-level functions, which date back to the earliest days of Unix. He observed at the time that for such functions, there really may only be one way to do things. Considering the vast amount of effort put into basic research in the 1960s by guys like IBM, it's hard to imagine too many concepts that haven't had at least a paper written about them at some point in the last fifty years.
The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
So:
Apple wants Nokia's patents.
Apple refuses to share their patents with Nokia.
Nokia has patent sharing with the other handset manufacturers. Apple wants to use Nokia's R&D without allowing Nokia to use Apple's R&D. Why is Nokia the bad guy here?
Just to let you Apple fanboys know, Nokia is the most open handset manufacturer. Both Symbian and Maemo are mostly open source. In both of them, you can install any app you want. The iphone is locked down, and allows you to install apps from only one place. Both of these models are fine, but its not as if Nokia is the super-proprietary company of the two.
Quite stupid, but I'm working on a embedded work of dtmf-signal recognition with a DTMF decoder found on http://johnetherton.com/projects/pys60-dtmf-detector, for Ubuntu, in python. I find this Python module working for Nokia S60... They had python working on theirs cell-phone, quite impressive... Those who know story about the D "button" on a phone-pad to drop all non-important call and let you access to a destination, is a old story starting from March 1942 ... But since Goertzel is a universal algorithm,.. Don't try to find out stupid thing to decode signal, and even if Newton is not embedded in this lovely-iPhone, everything fall on it and not we fall-for...
In the most recent quarter reported, Apple (with a tiny share of the market) was already making more profit on its iPhone than Nokia was on all of its handsets combined -- both dumb and smart phones. Also, AAPL's market cap is about four times that of NOK. So I'm not sure I agree with your conclusion about who is the big guy in this battle.
the Prada was announced December 2006
The impressive thing about LG's rollouts is how quick they are. The LG was already being shipped by the first week of 2006, and was on sale in Europe before the end of January. That's a full six months before Apple's second attempt at a mobile phone hit the streets, and at least two eons in mobile phone time.
Don't underestimate the Koreans. They also invented the first mp3 player... although a lot of people mistakenly attribute that to Apple as well. (I am not counting Kane Kramer's unique 1980s DAP because they entered public domain and everyone had access to them).
Da Blog
I use Maemo every day, and usability is excellent. It may take you a few minutes longer to figure out than the iPhone does, but it's not unintuitive and the task switcher is amazing.
My Sig: SEGV
That's why I mentioned two operating systems. Nokia's yesterday's technology is still dominating market share, and their new line of phones (N900) has been available for about a month.
My Sig: SEGV
Bravo on the double karma - I hope it was unintentional.
Pain is merely failure leaving the body
Most of the Nokia patents are old, non-obvious and already established. Its not like patents on "doing thing x, but this time on the internet!". Why Apple decided to spit in Nokias face i dont really understand. They cant win this one, especially since the US is trying to get software patents acknowledged in the EU. Now is really not the time to play the protectionist game so i dont think political pressure will be put into the courts.
HTTP/1.1 400
It can't even multitask, for god's sake
Yeah, but neither can Apple Macintoshes, unlike my trusty Amiga 500. Something to do with its handle based heap management I think.
That's not been true since OSX Server came out in 1999 (2002 for the desktop version). Why? Because it's essentially Unix under the hood.
Mind you, if you're still touting your Amiga then you probably don't mind sounding a decade out of date. I'll get off your lawn now.
"Little does he know, but there is no 'I' in 'Idiot'!"
This question touches on why I think there should not be monopoly grants at all. No patents for software, and no patents for anything else either. Some inventions that required a mechanical device when filed no longer need that, and can be done entirely on a computer. An example is a 1900 patent on a 24 hour clock. On the other hand, it is difficult to conceive how the immense variety in engines, one of the prime examples of physical devices that do physical work, could all be superceded by a universal device, but the possibility should not be dismissed. But the distinction doesn't matter. All patents hurt innovation regardless. They make the mere activity of innovative endeavor into an excursion through a minefield.
Whether we want something else for both software and hardware innovations is another question. I would rather see some sort of reward system, where inventors want their inventions used and copied and no permissions or blessings or payments needed, because they get bigger rewards regardless, and the users wouldn't have to chance that an idea might be claimed by someone else, because there wouldn't be any licensing fees, taxes, or punitive fines on the use of it. No one would have any sort of authority to deny or tax the use of an idea. No having to waste valuable time seeking out patents and their holders, an activity that could well be infinite in scope, and no having to hope trolls will not surface and sue.
Intellectual Property is a monopolistic, selfish, and defective concept. It is "tyranny over the mind of man"
As others have hinted at, this is really about Nokia refusing to license their GSM patents under the RAND terms that are required of GSM Association members, the same license terms that all the other handset manufacturers got from Nokia.
Whether Nokia follow their agreement with GSMA or not is a matter between Nokia and GSMA. Apple have no grounds to complain, because they aren't a party to that agreement.
Well.. you went and made me search wikipedia.. thanks for that.. 2008 total assets for Apple 39.57 billion .. 2008 total assets for Nokia 39.58 billion .. ok so you say, well thats only .01 billion more.. but the thing is, Nokia's billions are Euros.
waiting for ad.doubleclick.net
Well.. you went and made me search wikipedia.. thanks for that.. 2008 total assets for Apple 39.57 billion .. 2008 total assets for Nokia 39.58 billion .. ok so you say, well thats only .01 billion more.. but the thing is, Nokia's billions are Euros.
You should have searched something more up to date than wikipedia. That 39.47B figure is for 2008. According to their 10K they now have 53.85B, or which 34B is liquid assets. Nokia's market cap is less than double that.
Apple is not a GSM Association member. They had nothing to do with developing GSM, and so don't have claim to the favorable RAND terms available to GSM Association members.
If Nokia wanted more in exchange for the use of their patents than other GSM patent holders do, then that is their right.
My understanding is that Nokia agreed to license those patents under FRAND terms to anyone implementing the GSM standard as a condition of having those technologies as part of the standard. If so then they don't have right to ask for whatever they like now.
Wah? WTF? My brain just exploded.
Watch this Heartland Institute video
Doesn't matter what Nokia's assets are worth, share price is share price. And Apple's $34bn cash is enough to buy more than 50 percent of the shares and at that point Nokia does what Apple says.
>They have been in the business long enough that they may well have a case against Apple computers as well,
>since a phone is really nothing more than a small computer anyway.
and vice versa ...
The difference is the fact that "inventing" new software doesn't require the same level of expenditure in R&D as inventing a new hardware process, so doesn't need the monopoly protection that patents provide.
Apple is a benevolent company and would never do anything like this.
Software development is easy, does not require a lot of capital investment up front, people end up with largely the same code to do the same thing. In the end software is just mathematics (literally, not some "as" likeness).
If you patent something, you prevent anyone else from doing what you claimed to do yourself.
So if you were the first to find "hey you can potentiate numbers and thus make formulas shorter - x^5 instead of x*x*x*x*x" (I know, way too late to be the first, but just for the sake of argument), and patent it, well, that would be it, nobody else allowed to square numbers for about 15 years without talking to you first (and then, they'd probably still not be allowed to do it).
Hardware development, on the other hand, is hard, really hard. Try building a CCD sensor from scratch, you need manufactoring devices so exact they can fit who-knows-how many detectors per millimeter, without any leeway in their placement and without any dust. You somehow have to connect all of the millions of detectors to a bus using wires (or something) that somehow aren't in between the detector and the world and don't interfere with each other and don't have variable latency or overcomplicate the interface. I could go on (if the pixels are too close, you get quantum effects because photons are randomly absorbed sometimes by the left and sometimes by the right pixel, blahblah).
Not to mention what metric shitload of things you have to do when actually doing new stuff (imagine having to develop the first CCD detector pixel thingie when nobody did it ever before).
It's worrying to see such "what's the difference between hardware and software" posts, because when you have done both, it's clear why people prefer to do software implementation: it's just so simple compared to the alternative.
The iPod shuffle must be a joke, else why is Apple laughing all the way to bank, every single day, with a ton of cash.
The shuffle is perfect as a nice small shiny, good looking mp3 player for taking to the gym. No, it is not enough for me, but then you can get very rich by ignoring nerds like me.
MMO Quests are like orgasms:
You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.
SALES BAN WTF!
In fact, cross licensing is a perfectly normal part of these sorts of deals. If A actually needs B's patent X, then B asks for money plus patents. Why? Well, A might fall upon hard times and sue B with crappy patents
Apple needs Nokia's GSM patents. Nokia doesn't *need* any Apple patents. Nokia just wants the usual industry standard insurance policy granted by buyers when sellers give up the protection afforded by valuable patents. Guess what? Apple refused.
Apple acted like a spoiled brat and started a whole fight by refusing cross licensing. All other mobile makers are now saying "Oh, shit Apple is gonna be a patent troll!" Sony Ericsson, Motorola, HTC, and Google will all back Nokia.
Apple must realize their "multitouch" technology just isn't very valuable next to the underlying hardware that makes phones possible. "Yes, pretty interface, we'll happily knock a bit off the cross licensing deal for the rights to freely copy it, but your interface patent isn't nearly as valuable as our patent on the underlying technology."
The Christian religion has been and still is the principal enemy of moral progress in the world. -- Bertrand Russell
Nokia offered Apple a cross licensing deal beneficial to both companies. Apple refused, indicating their intent to use their interface patents against other mobile phone makers.
I've no idea what FRAND obligations Nokia faces under their original GSM Association membership, but Apple cannot pursue those obligations in court, as Apple is not the GSM Association.
Would some GSM Association member pursue those obligations in court on Apple's behalf? Doubtful, given Apple's indications that they'll sue other mobile makers once the GSM patents are off the table.
Apple's best option is simply agreeing to Nokia's original cross licensing deal.
p.s. It's very likely that Nokia merely asked for the cross licensing scheme built into the FRAND obligations of GSM Association membership, meaning even if Apple paid another GSM Association member to sue Nokia, they might still lose.
The Christian religion has been and still is the principal enemy of moral progress in the world. -- Bertrand Russell
Umm, so what? Nokia has an enormous patent portfolio too.
Nokia has the patents Apple wants. Nokia asked for cross licensing. Apple refused, indicating that Apple means to sue Nokia using their patents.
Apple started the fight by acting like a patent troll and refusing the standard cross licensing deal.
The Christian religion has been and still is the principal enemy of moral progress in the world. -- Bertrand Russell
Wouldn't it be just as plausible that after Apple put in the 2 years of development that it was LG that was the industrial spy and just cranked up their impressive capability to beat the iPhone to market?
In any case, the picture on the Wikipedia page owes just as much to any of the windows CE devices and Palms on the market as the iPhone owes that Prada.
Finally, in no way does IQ correlate to one's ability to proficiently code.
Really? So someone with an IQ of 80 is going to be able to learn to write code just as well as someone with an IQ of 120?
Also, 6.7% of the 9th grade population is (in the US) more than 280,000 students. That would be a lot of coders even if only 10% of the 6.7% learned to write code.
If you use an FPGA, then you're not designing the NAND and NOR gates, are you? You're just configuring some switches for the physical device(s) that were probably already patented. Though the probability is that most of the relevant patents have already expired.
That's not necessarily true. If the GSMA promotes (with the consent of the member manufacturers) the availability of this licensing to all potential licensees, then Apple might be able to claim to be an intended third-party beneficiary which would give them grounds to complain.
Processes resulting in physical changes are patentable. Like, for instance, a process for curing rubber.
Processes that reult in symbolic results, like an algorithm, are just math, and math has never been patentable in the US. Otherwise, you could patent thinking, which would be untenable.
Software is the latter, IMO.
IANAL, YMMV, etc.
It shouldn't be. "Algorithm X, implemented in pre-existing hardware" should be unpatentable.
Yes, that one is. But there are multiple problems with the patent system. The novelty and non-obviousness criteria are broken (to be non-novel pretty much means the prior art must describe exactly what the patent describes), and their implementations are even more broken (as the same thing as been patented multiple times on many occasions). But just because that's true doesn't mean software patents should be valid if it were false.
Actually it IS difficult. Because in the case of software, the schematic IS the device.
Sneer. Point. Laugh.
I know, I know. I should look at the claims before I sneer, point, and laugh. But really, for that title I'll make an exception. I mean, that one's right up there with the one about two disk shaped devices connected in their center by a rod.
Wouldn't it be just as plausible that after Apple put in the 2 years of development that it was LG that was the industrial spy and just cranked up their impressive capability to beat the iPhone to market?
That's an interesting assumption without any basis in reality, or even a preponderance of evidence in its favour. Consider this. LG has been in the business of mobile phones for two decades. It designs and delivers several dozen models a year (in fact, it's the world's third-largest phone manufacturer, literally dwarfing Apple's numbers by an order of magnitude). It is also actually Apple's main supplier of displays. Its R&D spend makes Apple's look like pocket change, and it has close to 200,000 employees, most of whom are not retail store clerks posing as "genii". Finally, if you think that LG was able to somehow purloin operational and design details of Apple's phone years before it was revealed, than you have a very different understanding of how the industry works, and how Apple's notorious internal surveillance works.
Da Blog
Uh, dude. Sony Ericsson and Motorola are part of the cartel with Nokia so of course they would back Nokia. They also do not pay as much as other companies that are not part of the cartel. Google is not a handset maker and they use HTC as well as Motorola as their OEM. Cross licensing is common when both parties agree to it. Do you comprehend that an agreement requires both parties to agree? If you are told that you must give access to patents or pay triple the normal fee that everyone else pays would you not consider that illegal extortion?
Jesus was a compassionate social conservative who called individuals to sin no more.
Right, and I can teleport. I just don't do it.
They don't have 34 billion in cash though do they ? They have 34 billion in assets.. Noika's 34 billion is euros, which is 48 billion US BTW.. so to achieve half of 48 billion, they would need 24 billion... So lets think about that, if this crazy scenario were to play out (it won't).. Apple uses 24 billion, leaving only 10 billion in their own company.. But what about the other way, what if Nokia went even crazier and used 17 billion to buy half of Apple, leaving them 31 billion in their own company.. who sounds stronger ?
waiting for ad.doubleclick.net
As overpriced as apples gadgets are, i would say turn-about is fair play, apple should pay. greedy bastards
Nevertheless, Apple just reveled they plan on being a patent troll about their silly multi-touch patents. So nobody will back them. If nobody backs them, they cannot appeal to the RAND licensing component of Nokia's GSM Association membership, which makes Apple just another patent infringer.
Nokia play it well, by tricking Apple into revealing their true colors. Apple will now need to cross license.
The Christian religion has been and still is the principal enemy of moral progress in the world. -- Bertrand Russell
there still where too many buttons
Given that I am often multitasking with my visual attention, I actually *prefer* devices with a goodly number of well-placed buttons with tactile feedback. The haptic phone screens pioneered by Samsung are a poor substitute, and the dead glass screens favoured by Apple are simply terrible for feedback and apparently designed to demand the operator's full attention be focussed on the screen and the UI operation. Which is how Apple likes it, but not really what I want from a device that I like to operate in an unplanned environment and often remotely within a pocket or similar. Apple has consciously designed its handheld devices like this, in a way that foregrounds the operation and forces the operator to unveil the device. Effectively acting as a walking marketing billboard. It's a clever strategy, and one that appeals to a lot of people who mistake ersatz design minimalism for real usability simplicity.
Da Blog
Last time I checked the MS-friendly /. clone was called ActiveDot (News for suits, Stuff that blue-screens). Actually, I haven't checked it in about ten years and now that I think about it, I think they renamed it Dot2000, and then MSNDot, and then DotDotNet, and then LiveDot. So maybe it is BingDot by now.
I mean, that one's right up there with the one about two disk shaped devices connected in their center by a rod.
Hey, don't make fun of the method of fashioning a two-circled axle device - Nokia holds the rights to that one and is defending it in no less a venue than Texas.
And how much would a mistake cost to fix in a post-production run vs. most software?
Michael J. Ryan - tracker1.info
To the mods who gave this clown +5, Informative: did you really think Nokia has only such mickey mouse patents to go to war with? here is a list of patents (I don't have the patent numbers, just the names):
Data Transmission in a Radio Telephone Network
Data Transfer in a Mobile Telephone Network
Measurement Report Transmission in a Telecommunications System
Access Channel for Reduced Access Delay in a Telecommunications System
Reporting Cal Measurement Results in a Cellular Communication System
Method and Apparatus for Speech Transmission in a Mobile Communication System
Speech Synthesizer Employing Post-Processing for Enhancing the Quality of the Synthesized Speech
Method of Ciphering Data Transmission in a Radio System
Integrity Check in a Communication System
System for Ensuring Encrypted Communication After handover
"The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
Nice argument from history.
I will argue the it's been wrong and against the point of patents even 132 years ago.
Software should not be patent, and neither should it's process.
Patenting a software precess strangles an industry. From a practical stand point patenting a software process effectively blocks all software development. There are very few actual process software does. Many different programs sue the same process,as do compilers.
You should be able to copyright software.
I mean, we don't allow people to process sentence structure.
The Kruger Dunning explains most post on
"..., then you can get a broad patent on mouse traps."
but you shouldn't be able to do that.
Patents are suppose to be specific so people can add to them and innovate.
No one has implemented a holographic interface, so I'll patent holographic interface and stifle everyone.
it's stupid.
\Patent the idea of a mousetrap and you stop all mouse trap industry.
The Kruger Dunning explains most post on
Well, there you go. As you say, you have no idea what FRAND obligations Nokia faces. So I will describe them to you.
In 2008, Nokia demanded that, as part of it’s compensation for licensing Nokia’s portfolio of purported essential patents, Apple must grant Nokia a license to a particular number of Apple non-standards-essential patents. That demand is prima-facie discriminatory. Nokia is not allowed to troll through the entire portfolio of a company when assembling the terms of a license. That behavior is practically the opposite of what the GSM Association was assembled to do.
Then in 2009, Nokia actually worsened their terms, by demanding a royalty three times greater than any other they'd offered in the past.
Your ignorance invalidates the rest of your "argument", including your bizarre condition that only the GSM Association itself can file a patent lawsuit against its members.
Why should Nokia play nice with Apple? Really. Apple is making buckets of money using Nokia's research.
Nokia says: "fine, but we want access to your research also, and some money".
Apple says: "we need your patents, but you can't have ours"
Nokia says: "fine. then you can pay through the nose for them"
Are you suggesting that they should give the same terms to Apple that they give to other manufacturers without cross-licensing? Is Apple's multi-touch research more valuable and deserving of protection than Nokia's GSM research?
Patents are suppose to be specific so people can add to them and innovate.
The fact that something is patented does not stop you from improving on it, or from patenting your improvements. You don't have to have the right to make and sell something to patent it.
No one has implemented a holographic interface, so I'll patent holographic interface and stifle everyone.
Send me your enabling disclosure, and I will be happy to submit your patent application. I can also help you with licensing
Today's Sesame Street was brought to you by the number e.
Did you ever take an introductory CS class? I'm guessing that you wrote some simple program like a bubble sort. Are you saying that everybody's bubble sort program was identical to everybody else's bubble sort program? No, of course not. Bubble sort is a method. A method is patentable if it meets the other (presently ill-defined) requirements. Your little bubblesort.c source file is like the schematic. It is protected by copyright. Nobody is permitted to copy your bubblesort.c without your permission. But that doesn't stop anybody from writing a bubble sort program of their own.
Today's Sesame Street was brought to you by the number e.
Knowingly infringing a patent generally attracts 3 times the penalty automatically (over unknowingly infringing). If Apple infringed, they most certainly did it knowingly.
The Nokia hardware platform problem is multitouch. Resistive touchscreens are much less expensive to build, and multitouch is possible on such technology- but like the early days of LCD TV trying to compete with Plasma, the behavior is manifestly worse. Just like the old LCDs did a terrible job with motion, the current resistive screens do a really terrible job of recognizing a user's touch. Even a single-touch action gets mishandled or unrecognized from time to time. It's a hardware problem, and IMO Nokia's premier product is behind the competition in touchscreen. Resistive screens may catch up Capacitative screens in the future, or Nokia might switch in a future product... but right now, even the N900 is frustrating to use, and this is the main reason why.
The software problem is upcoming, not yet even present in Maemo v5. As you all know, Nokia bought Trolltech, the makers of the 'Qt' graphics toolkit. Nearly all of 'Qt' is now open source code, LGPL. (The switch to this particular license, granting un-revocable and very liberal terms others to use as they please, was a Nokia choice, subsequent to the purchase.) Software developers were, and are, thrilled by the possibility of "write once, run anywhere" graphical applications. And I think that this was an important reason for Nokia's acquisition, even if the main reason had been a defensive purchase of TrollTech's toolkit 'intellectual property' before it got bought by someone else and patented/re-licensed under nasty terms by someone else.I'll guess that both considerations were considered to be extremely important.
But Maemo 6 inherits two GUI tookits: It's own, which is fairly complete but totally non-portable; and QT v4, which is beautifully designed, but not yet sufficiently complete, not even for computer applications. (You need to provide tons of widgets yourself, either by writing them raw or using another toolkit to "help out" with additional elements. KDE and the Maemo 6 Graphics Library can theoretically utilize qt elements as "lower layer" items, but it's hard to do it all from inside Qt-- it just isn't there yet.) KDE uses Qt very heavily, as an underlying "layer". Maemo use of Qt brand new, and IMO you're better off using the legacy elements. Instead of instantiating a Qt window, with it's controls, you're going to want to create a Maemo window, in the "old" way. After you've committed yourself to which kind of App Window it is, all the child controls and methods are totally different source code. So, if you want to create an App for both desktop KDE and Symbian phones, your code grows into a huge jungle of #ifdef MAEMO .... #elif KDE .... #endif macros, nearly as thick and nasty as using common source code for Linux/X11 and win32 implementations of your program. Development and maintenance of such stuff isn't easy or fun, so SOME people will try to code using just QT-- and I'm afraid that their Apps might end up looking a lot different. Two UI's for the end user, in different programs on the same device, would IMO be a disaster for Nokia.
I don't think the problem comes from departmental infighting, I think that it's more a question of not-enough-time. It takes time, LOTS of time, to unify those toolkits, and everyone who already wrote something (the writers of KDE4; the writers of KDE Apps; all the writers of Maemo Apps) depends on the groups of developers (i.e., the writers of Qt and the writers of the Maemo graphics tookit) not to break their existing GUI code. The time and money simply wasn't there for such an enormous project. I won't be surprised if it isn't there for Mameo-7, or Maemo-8, either. Be
There is some huge R&D required to do an internal antenna which will function exactly or better than external antenna, especially in high (900+Mhz) frequencies.
One AC replied to another Apple apologist even points to the URL of the patent below. Gotta browse Apple mentioned stories at -1 you know, for known reasons.
BTW, I am almost banned from Nokia websites, I use 4-5 Macs regularly but it doesn't change the fact that Apple really does a big mistake if they trust to their PR department on this issue. Judges are never impressed by how "cool" you are, they look at the facts.
Seems like a lot of Nokia staff moderates in here, since they trolls the facts.. Interesting.
In order to form an immaculate member of a flock of sheep one must, above all, be a sheep.
Usually, the dominant mood in these forums is anti-patent. Not so when it's Apple, another favorite bugaboo, getting sued.
They're countersuing, alleging Nokia infringes.
And of course, there's the old saw that when you're competing well, you sell your product; when things are not going so well, and you're losing marketshare, you sue.
Apple definitely cannot hold Nokia to any FRAND obligations because Apple is not party to the contracts involved in forming the GSM Association.
Sorry, that's how contracts work. You cannot sue your landlord for renting an identical unit to yours to his cousin for half your rent, as you are not party to that contract. Similarly, you cannot sue various OSS companies who offer their software under the GPL for also offering their software under commercial licenses. Contracts inherently work that way.
The Christian religion has been and still is the principal enemy of moral progress in the world. -- Bertrand Russell
The GSM Association, like any other industry regulatory body with members, can require its members to conduct their affairs a certain way even with regard to entities that are NOT part of the body, including competitors and POTENTIAL competitors who are trying to enter the industry. Those obligations can be declared enforceable by a local, state, or federal agency. In this specific case of Apple vs. Nokia, they have been. And Apple has filed suit in the appropriate venue.
Your examples regarding landlords and the GPL are inane red herrings.