Slashdot Mirror


Samsung Vs. Apple Tit-For-Tat Down Under

New submitter GumphMaster writes "In the latest edition of the Apple vs. Samsung patent fight, the ABC is reporting that Samsung has filed in Australian and Japanese courts seeking an injunction to halt sales of the iPhone 4S for alleged 3G patent violations. It remains to be seen whether Samsung has any better luck with the retaliatory strike in Australian and Japanese courts than it did with courts in the Netherlands. Unfortunately, I expect that Samsung will fail partly because of overseas precedent, but mostly because their patents are sane, technical and narrow in scope (unlike the patent-a-rectangle nature of the opposition). If this stupidity ever stops, then millions of dollars, euro, or Won that are being spent on lawyers might actually go into the innovation that patents are meant to promote. Who knows where that might lead?"

313 comments

  1. MS Stole Apple's Lunch Money in the 80's by wzinc · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Not going to let Samsung do that, too...

    1. Re:MS Stole Apple's Lunch Money in the 80's by mug+funky · · Score: 1

      Apple stole Xerox's lunch money.

      how can a person take sides in a matter between companies they don't work for? i suppose there's always Apple stock, but surely if that were the case you'd just buy up big when the press is bad and sell at launch dates?

    2. Re:MS Stole Apple's Lunch Money in the 80's by wzinc · · Score: 2, Informative

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PARC_(company)#Accomplishments

      "The first successful commercial GUI product was the Apple Macintosh, which was heavily inspired by PARC's work; Xerox was allowed to buy pre-IPO stock from Apple, in exchange for engineer visits and an understanding that Apple would create a GUI product."

      I wish people would steal from me and offer pre-IPO stock...

    3. Re:MS Stole Apple's Lunch Money in the 80's by schnikies79 · · Score: 1

      It was a negotiated deal. Nothing was stolen.

      --
      Gone!
    4. Re:MS Stole Apple's Lunch Money in the 80's by ZackSchil · · Score: 4, Informative

      Please read this article. It's not very long.

      http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2011/05/16/110516fa_fact_gladwell

      Apple asked Xerox politely if it could have its lunch money and Xerox handed it over willingly in exchange for lunch... futures.

      Look, I don't know about making this a metaphor. Point is that the "Apple stole from Xerox" thing is basically a myth. It was all above board. Xerox may seriously regret giving away the idea of the century in exchange for basically nothing but that doesn't change what happened.

    5. Re:MS Stole Apple's Lunch Money in the 80's by hedwards · · Score: 1

      If you read the article, you'd see that you're wrong. Jobs charged Xerox for the discounted shares in order to see what was going on at PARC, Xerox did not give Apple a license to use the look and feel or any of the IP. Later after Apple sued MS for stealing the look and feel, Xerox sued Apple for stealing the look and feel. Ultimately, the Xerox suit was thrown out on a technicality, but that whole business hardly sounds like an above the board deal.

    6. Re:MS Stole Apple's Lunch Money in the 80's by ZackSchil · · Score: 3, Informative

      What the... there's nothing about lawsuits in there. It just talks about the negotiations between Xerox and Apple, and how Apple didn't just copy what they saw, but tweaked and expanded on it massively until it was a completely different product.

      Xerox's claims were dismissed because the claims they made were not actual violations of law. The court also didn't uphold any of Apple's claims vs Microsoft either, other than some silly stuff about a trash can icon, so it's not like Xerox lost out because they didn't dot their 'i's while mean old Apple Legal raped and pillaged.

    7. Re:MS Stole Apple's Lunch Money in the 80's by carrel2 · · Score: 1

      How they implement this change. Gamestop coupons

    8. Re:MS Stole Apple's Lunch Money in the 80's by StripedCow · · Score: 1

      Many devices including the iPhone and iPad have moved away from the "overlapping windows" metaphor, so who cares anymore?

      On second thought, perhaps the author of the good old Unix "screen" utility should start to sue some companies.

      --
      If Pandora's box is destined to be opened, *I* want to be the one to open it.
    9. Re:MS Stole Apple's Lunch Money in the 80's by catmistake · · Score: 1

      Point is that the "Apple stole from Xerox" thing is basically a myth.

      It is that on two fronts. When defending MS, Microsoft apologists will often bring up this history. But Apple didn't just change the shading themes, move a few things around, and release the result and call it their own, like Microsoft basically did with Windows. The Macintosh team learned from innovations at Xerox PARC, used some of them, re-designed others, and innovated a significant number of original early gui-desktop concepts. The Macintosh desktop did not come from Xerox. It is a ridiculous unfounded accusation from those that are ignorant of history.

    10. Re:MS Stole Apple's Lunch Money in the 80's by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And Xerox waited wait too long to sue and was well beyond the statute of limitations. If Xerox actually had a problem with what Apple did, why didn't they sue earlier? The problem was Xerox may have simply forgotten what it agreed to a decade (and different personnel) later.

  2. If Apple and Samsung are fighting it out by sethstorm · · Score: 1

    Wouldn't that just open a market for knockoffs?

    --
    Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
    1. Re:If Apple and Samsung are fighting it out by Fluffeh · · Score: 1

      No. While they are both fighting each other (although Apple seems to have the better lawyers after a few salvo exchanges), be assured that should another phone enter the marketplace, these two would just as quickly turn on it in unison and then resume their own spit once the new player was out of the equation.

      Whoever or whatever started it, both these companies are trying to really dig their heels in to be the ONLY smartphone company - they just happen to be each others biggest rivals at the moment.

      --
      Moved to http://soylentnews.org/. You are invited to join us too!
    2. Re:If Apple and Samsung are fighting it out by Max+Littlemore · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I don't think that's quite true. Apple has initiated all of this and Samsung has retaliated quite reluctantly. I have been wondering why Samsung didn't launch this action months ago. Samsung doesn't seem to want to stifle competition, because they make money from phones Apple sells.

      --
      I don't therefore I'm not.
    3. Re:If Apple and Samsung are fighting it out by CheerfulMacFanboy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      No. While they are both fighting each other (although Apple seems to have the better lawyers after a few salvo exchanges),

      Apple doesn't have the better lawyers, they have the better case.

      --
      Fandroids hate facts.
    4. Re:If Apple and Samsung are fighting it out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You left out the other 24 important details of that case. Eric's pubic hair must have blocked your view.

    5. Re:If Apple and Samsung are fighting it out by coinreturn · · Score: 0

      Better case over fucking rectangles and squares?? Why don't you go and suck Jobs' dick? Oh wait....!

      Your repressed homosexuality is showing.

    6. Re:If Apple and Samsung are fighting it out by catmistake · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I don't think that's quite true. Apple has initiated all of this and Samsung has retaliated quite reluctantly. I have been wondering why Samsung didn't launch this action months ago. Samsung doesn't seem to want to stifle competition, because they make money from phones Apple sells.

      I think Apple's initial claim was valid... its obvious the Samsung product in question would never have existed if not for iPhone. Don't get caught up over rectangles, Samsung is clearly and without any duplicity whatsoever attempting to take advantage of iPhone's popularity by releasing a product that superficially looks identical to Apple's. You seem to be of the opinion "I'm suing you because you're suing me" is a perfectly valid legal strategy. If it is, then sure... Samsung is just doing what it can not to get caught under the deadly wheels of Apple's crushing anti-competitive practices as it chews up and digests industrial giants on its way to world domination.

    7. Re:If Apple and Samsung are fighting it out by delinear · · Score: 1

      I did read - and I have no citation for this nor do I know the validity of the claim so I add it here as purely anecdotal - that Samsung supply certain components to Apple (the two obviously also have a lot of cross licensing deals for various bits of tech). If that is true, it might explain their reluctance to go to court until it started hurting their bottom line sufficiently to justify risking their existing contracts with Apple - does anyone have any more information on this?

    8. Re:If Apple and Samsung are fighting it out by E+IS+mC(Square) · · Score: 0

      It's interesting that you thought of it that way. May be it's showing your psychology more than anything else?

    9. Re:If Apple and Samsung are fighting it out by delinear · · Score: 1

      The best we can hope for is that enough companies get bitten enough times that they eventually turn some of their capital towards lobbying for less stupid IP laws. The big problem with that is that the big companies can afford a few losses and IP still overall works in their favour to keep the little guys off the playing field.

    10. Re:If Apple and Samsung are fighting it out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And.. you're still missing 24 important points. I'm guessing Eric doesn't talk much, right? Just asks you to leave the room when he's done?

    11. Re:If Apple and Samsung are fighting it out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whoever or whatever started it, both these companies are trying to really dig their heels in to be the ONLY smartphone company - they just happen to be each others biggest rivals at the moment.

      That's not a really fair statement. Apple may have been trying to be the only smartphone company, but Samsung certainly isn't. They are just defending themselves.

    12. Re:If Apple and Samsung are fighting it out by SiChemist · · Score: 1

      From February, 2011:

      A report from the Wall Street Journal suggests Apple is about to become Samsung's biggest customer in a deal estimated to be worth US$7.8 billion. As part of its purchase, Apple will be securing LCD displays, NAND flash memory and mobile chipsets from the Korean manufacturer. Each of these components will be used to build Apple's popular iPad and iPhone.

      Original here.

      Until it became obvious that Apple was seeking out other suppliers to replace them, Samsung tread lightly in their legal spat with Apple. When Apple (essentially) dumped them as a supplier, they started fighting back.

    13. Re:If Apple and Samsung are fighting it out by coinreturn · · Score: 0

      It's interesting that you thought of it that way. May be it's showing your psychology more than anything else?

      Wow, weak attempt to turn it around. You are on slashdot; hence Prob(male) is very high. You say "suck Jobs' dick." Hence your reference is homosexual.

    14. Re:If Apple and Samsung are fighting it out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is an interesting perversion of libertarian values that sends support to companies that routinely use industrial espionage to advantage. Who thinks a company could afford to innovate anything without the promise of patent protection? Sure, a widget here, and a widget there can be built, but without patents the rate of true innovation will come to a virtual standstill. Is it utopian to dream of working a 9-5 job subsisting in a business that has no money to innovate, and then come home, eat dinner, and become slavish progenators of crappy hobbyist software/hardware into the midnight hours? All for the sake of declaring it open-source? That's not living.

    15. Re:If Apple and Samsung are fighting it out by MobileTatsu-NJG · · Score: 1

      If you look in the mirror, your arsehole would look like it has steve jobs' dick in yours arsehole. does that mean anything to you other than you being Apple's bitch?

      ...

      Can't understand a word - can you pull Steve Jobs' dick our of your mouth first? Thank you.

      ...

      And the worst fanbois.

      Better case over fucking rectangles and squares?? Why don't you go and suck Jobs' dick? Oh wait....!
       

      ...

      Aha.. the typical apple asshole who assumes anybody who hates apple is automatically a google/android fan. Sorry to burst your bubble, I hate Apple V2.0 way before Android was even thought of. Why don't you go back to sucking Jobs' dick? Oh wait!

      I'm sorry, could you repeat that? Heh.

      --

      "I like to lick butts!" by MobileTatsu-NJG (#32700246) (Score:5, Informative)

    16. Re:If Apple and Samsung are fighting it out by jo_ham · · Score: 1

      Yes, it's all about "fucking rectangles". You nailed it.

      Why do they even have a legal department when they can just ask you?

    17. Re:If Apple and Samsung are fighting it out by CheerfulMacFanboy · · Score: 1

      And the worst fanbois.

      So you are an Apple fanboy, because nothing can be worse than you.

      --
      Fandroids hate facts.
  3. Well, it depends by dev897 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    At least Apple didn't try to patent wireless data transfer.... Samsung has a patent (of course invalid) that covers pretty much all radio communications.... There is not good or bad, they all are bad, and lawyers win as usual....

    1. Re:Well, it depends by Kartu · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "At least they didn't try"? Are you serious? How much money does Apple spend on such R&D please? How much Samsung, owning core 3G patents (and that worldwide, not US where you can patent basic ideas) and what not spends on it?

      Apple "develops" in-house brilliant "design patents" like rectangle with rounded corners. Apple BOUGHT company that had multi-touch patent. Apple BOUGHT company that has developed Siri (former appstore app, now withdrawn)
      Samsung spends money on real R&D.

    2. Re:Well, it depends by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wish someone would patent goatse

    3. Re:Well, it depends by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But apple did try to patent the rectangle. That's even worse than wireless data transfer in my books

    4. Re:Well, it depends by dev897 · · Score: 1

      I notice something strange in my acheevments page. It says:
      Have a goatse comment modded up : 1

    5. Re:Well, it depends by andydread · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Yeah.. but Apple filed software-patents on swipe-to-unlock, pinch-zooming, scroll-bouncing, "Displaying pictures as thumbnails and when clicked opens in a picture viewer, " All a bunch of obvious software-patents. and patents on effects/gestures all software patents meaning that if your decide to write code that does anything similar, then Apple through the use of software-patents, not copyright will own your totally different code. The days of being able to write code freely without it getting cleared by Apple and Microsoft are coming to an end. And you are ok with this?? Software is authored works. You are ok with companies filing patents on authored works? Should book authors file patents on books stories? Should music authors file patents on the concept of the story in their songs? So if I write a book on the concept of a love story should i be able to sue over that concept? blocking any other book on a love story even if the story is completely different? if not then why should Apple be able to take ownership of my authored code when it is not theirs and is completely different just because it provides a similar function?

    6. Re:Well, it depends by Super_Z · · Score: 1
      The Samsung vs. Apple case is not about software patents but about Samsung ripping off Apple design:

      http://peanutbuttereggdirt.com/e/2011/05/03/apple-vs-samsung-a-visual-guide-to-apples-ip-claims-hardware-icons-packaging/

    7. Re:Well, it depends by andydread · · Score: 1

      I see people keep posting that bit of propaganda take a look here http://www.2imgs.com/6c941c36e5 THe injunction that Apple got in the Netherlands was for a "Displaying thumbnails in a photo app" and that is software patent. not for patent a rectangle design patent which the judge thew out due to prior art. And prior art there is. Take a gander here.

    8. Re:Well, it depends by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 2

      It depends on which case you're talking about, because they are different in different countries. The very first injunction they've had (in Germany) was about design patents, yes. The one in Australia is about multitouch gestures instead, and could be applied to pretty much any non-iOS device. Specific patents that Apple has used to block Samsung sales in Australia:

      Innovation Patents
      2008100283: List scrolling and document translation, scaling, and rotation on a touch-screen display
      2008100372: Electronic device for photo management
      2009100820: Unlocking a device by performing gestures on an unlock image
      2008100419: Unlocking a device by performing gestures on an unlock image
      2008101171: Portable electronic device for imaged-based browsing of contacts

      Standard Patents
      2008201540: List scrolling and document translation, scaling, and rotation on a touch-screen display
      2005246219: Multipoint touchscreen
      2007283771: Portable electronic device for photo management
      2009200366: List scrolling and document translation, scaling, and rotation on a touch-screen display
      2007286532: Touch screen device, method and graphical user interface for determining commands by applying heuristics

      (from here)

  4. Screw apple. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Patent the circle and the triangle.

    Ipods got both of them in there.

    Patent the particle too... apple uses those as well.

  5. Hey, buddy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    So two wrongs make a right in this world? No wonder tooth paste costs me $9 a tube these days.

    1. Re:Hey, buddy. by wzinc · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Well, MS wasn't 'wrong' in the 80's; Apple just wrote a poor contract that technically allowed them to use a desktop-style OS... after having paid Xerox for it in stock. MS just used shrewd business practices. IMO, they were unethical, but perfectly legal. Samsung, on the other hand, doesn't have such a contract, so I'm not sure how they're going to get away with this. I'd hate to see computing go straight from the MS dark ages to the Android dark ages.

    2. Re:Hey, buddy. by hedwards · · Score: 1, Troll

      I keep hearing people claim that Apple didn't steal their desktop style design from Xerox and that they paid for it, but it never happened. Apple paid to take a look at what Xerox was doing, and was ultimately sued for stealing the look and feel from Xerox. That isn't exactly the sort of thing you'd expect if Apple had really licensed the look and feel. It did turn out to be a moot point when all was said and done because you can't copyright it, but still.

    3. Re:Hey, buddy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Congratulations, Mr. Apple ultra-fanboi.

      Seems that Xerox didn't agree with your Apple interpretation and sued Apple after Apple sued MS.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xerox_PARC#Adoption_by_Apple

      Secondly, "Desktop style OS" existed in 1984 on UNIX too. It just wasn't "popular".
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X_Window_System

      Anyway, if one company was able to patent GUI, then the entire computer environment would be utterly and completely fucked. And today you are proclaiming that Apple "rectangular screen" is a valid patent. What's next? Patent the wheel? Just, wow.

    4. Re:Hey, buddy. by Adrian+Lopez · · Score: 1

      Apple just wrote a poor contract that technically allowed them to use a desktop-style OS

      God forbid any company besides Apple be allowed to make a desktop-style OS.

      --
      "In prison you just have to shut your eyes and take it. Here you have to shut your eyes and give it."
    5. Re:Hey, buddy. by pookemon · · Score: 2

      Patent the wheel?

      Already been done

      --
      dnuof eruc rof aixelsid
    6. Re:Hey, buddy. by shellbeach · · Score: 2

      Secondly, "Desktop style OS" existed in 1984 on UNIX too. It just wasn't "popular".
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X_Window_System

      Far be it from me to defend an Apple fanboi, but the Apple Lisa predates this, being released in 1983. Everything, of course, stemmed from PARC, and a rather inexplicit agreement to "look" at Xerox's operations in return for Apple stock didn't give Apple IP rights to all GUIs (and thank god, too!)

    7. Re:Hey, buddy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd hate to see computing go straight from the MS dark ages to the Android dark ages.

      Probably just as much as I'd hate to see computing become a single vendor walled garden. Competition is goo.d.

    8. Re:Hey, buddy. by CheerfulMacFanboy · · Score: 1

      I keep hearing people claim that Apple didn't steal their desktop style design from Xerox and that they paid for it, but it never happened. Apple paid to take a look at what Xerox was doing, and was ultimately sued for stealing the look and feel from Xerox. That isn't exactly the sort of thing you'd expect if Apple had really licensed the look and feel. It did turn out to be a moot point when all was said and done because you can't copyright it, but still.

      Of course Xerox' case was dismissed because Apple had licensed the GUI (not to mention that what Apple did didn't look much like what Xerox did). So much for that little debunking of what "didn't happen".

      --
      Fandroids hate facts.
    9. Re:Hey, buddy. by CheerfulMacFanboy · · Score: 1

      Apple just wrote a poor contract that technically allowed them to use a desktop-style OS

      God forbid any company besides Apple be allowed to make a desktop-style OS.

      God forbid you guys ever drop the hyperbole (or actually understand what this is about). Apple only sued over GUI elements that were copies of theirs - and not copies of Xerox' while we are at it). Just like Apple doesn't sue over tablets that aren't copies of the iPad.

      --
      Fandroids hate facts.
    10. Re:Hey, buddy. by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      stealing the look and feel from Xerox

      What look and feel did they take from Xerox? Menu bar? Nope, Apple created that - Xerox had some free-floating things that looked a little bit like menus. Overlapping windows? Nope, they weren't present at Xerox. The desktop metaphor with the trash can? Nope, that was Jef Raskin (working at Apple).

      The case was dismissed because, other than having white rectangular windows with black borders, the Apple look and feel was nothing like the Xerox one.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    11. Re:Hey, buddy. by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Uhhh....how EXACTLY were they unethical? they PAID Apple for the rights to use several elements that Apple had in turn paid Xerox for, at the time I'm sure they thought MSFT was suckers because at the time IBM PC tech frankly sucked compared to the Motorola tech apple was using. Apple foolishly didn't see that for the masses it isn't about what's "best" its about what's "good enough" with the best price point. At the same time IBM royally fucked up by not buying an exclusive license for DOS thinking nobody would have the balls to go against big blue, besides they had the BIOS locked up....or so they thought.

      IMHO you really didn't see the vicious douchebaggery from Bill & Co until the 90s, when they started fucking over companies like Drivespace and Spyglass and held the industry back for half a decade by showing screencaps of a non existent OS. For those that don't know what I'm talking about this article is quite a good read. One really has to give Gates credit, how many could control an ENTIRE industry with NOTHING but pure bullshit and giant brass balls? Takes a hell of a poker player to pull off a bluff THAT big. I sure wouldn't want to play Texas Hold 'em with the guy.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    12. Re:Hey, buddy. by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The case was dismissed because, other than having white rectangular windows with black borders, the Apple look and feel was nothing like the Xerox one.

      Xerox obviously forgot to patent the Rectangle.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    13. Re:Hey, buddy. by uglyduckling · · Score: 2

      Xerox didn't agree, sued and lost. Your point? The X Window System is not, and never was, a "Desktop Style OS".

      The point here is that Samsung is deliberately trying to clone the iPad, even down to the shape of the dock connector and the styling of the charger. I'm not sure about the validity of some of Apple's patents, but I think it's ridiculous for people to imply that Apple shouldn't be trying. I would think any decent company, in their position, would try to take action against a company of Samsung's size and influence blatently bringing out clone products.

    14. Re:Hey, buddy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now you are just preventing them from rewriting the history.

      APPLE COPIED XEROX, YOU ASSHOLES. Your god jobs was just a scumbag theif. Deal with it.

    15. Re:Hey, buddy. by starmonkey · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Anyone who talks about a company "stealing" something as vague as the look-and-feel of an interface has obviously never invented anything. Inventors usually stand on the shoulders of inventors before them, making small improvements and combinations of several existing ideas. It's a much more evolutionary process than a spontaneous leaps-and-bounds process. Example: Does your website use a menu bar on the side or top of the screen, instead of a bunch of hypertext links in the main body of the page? Did you invent that concept, or "steal" it from someone else?

    16. Re:Hey, buddy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, they "cloned" dock and charger and rounded rectangle shape, but then they forgot to clone iPad's iOS and hardware and instead stuck some And-droid or something inside, those korean dumbfucks.

      But who cares about software and hardware, because what's important is dock connector and charger, of course!

    17. Re:Hey, buddy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's all well and good but there is an entire raft of law dedicated to allowing a company to protect "vague look and feel". How else do you think Apple is busy trying to prove they own the patent on rectangular tablet devices?

    18. Re:Hey, buddy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      God forbid if you stop sucking steve's dick. He is dead, leave his corpse alone, you assholes.

    19. Re:Hey, buddy. by CapuchinSeven · · Score: 1

      Everything you said is basically full of fail, some of us happened to be alive at the time and remember full well what happened. You're wrong.

    20. Re:Hey, buddy. by SiChemist · · Score: 1

      You're wrong about the overlapping windows (and IMO the desktop metaphor, albeit without a trash can):

      Xerox Star

    21. Re:Hey, buddy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean "to protect concrete look and feel". "Sidebar menu" is one thing, but, e.g., "sidebar menu with white Arial text on blue-cyan diagonal gradient background with submenus appearing besides the main menu by sliding" is another (though not enough by itself for protection, probably)

    22. Re:Hey, buddy. by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      That's the Star, from 1981. Steve Jobs got his tour of PARC in 1979, when he was shown the Alto, not the Star.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    23. Re:Hey, buddy. by SiChemist · · Score: 1

      You said they weren't present at Xerox. That was incorrect.

    24. Re:Hey, buddy. by aristotle-dude · · Score: 1

      You said they weren't present at Xerox. That was incorrect.

      For all we know, Steve Jobs could have asked "why don't the windows overlap" during the tour and someone there took that suggestion and incorporated in a later release.

      --
      Jesus was a compassionate social conservative who called individuals to sin no more.
    25. Re:Hey, buddy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Alto had overlapping windows too.

    26. Re:Hey, buddy. by Adrian+Lopez · · Score: 1

      Apple only sued over GUI elements that were copies of theirs...

      GUI elements such as overlapping windows. Such thieves, those Microsoft people.

      --
      "In prison you just have to shut your eyes and take it. Here you have to shut your eyes and give it."
    27. Re:Hey, buddy. by DJRumpy · · Score: 3, Informative

      Have you ever even looked at the evidence against Samsung? I'm guessing not since you posted Anonymous. They copied the design, the icons, the packaging, even the power adapter is identical. This isn't some 'vague look and feel', but pretty much straight clone. It is an obvious attempt to cash in on customer confusion.

      http://copyrightcommerceandculture.com/2011/05/12/did-samsung-copy-apples-iphone-ipad/

      http://www.idownloadblog.com/2011/09/29/apple-samsung-copycat-2/

      How can you look at the above links and call it 'vague'? Hell they even got caught using iPhone graphics on their own webpage.

      http://feeds.appleinsider.com/click.phdo?i=d1a78f8d91e14e80da004b76d84dbe93

      I mean seriously?

    28. Re:Hey, buddy. by scot4875 · · Score: 1

      Link 1: The two phones pictured have a similar shape. That's about where the similarity ends. The Samsung phone has a larger screen. It has more physical buttons. The icons are not the same, though they are laid out on a grid. It has more external connectors. The profile is not the same. And that's just the obvious stuff that the obviously biased story failed to make look similar; the phones aren't photographed next to each other, so it's impossible to know from that whether the size and color balance were messed with to make them look even more similar.

      Link 2: I've got a ton of USB adapters; the one I have for my Logitech Harmony Remote looks a *lot* like the Apple adapter too. There are only so many ways you can design a small wall wart with a port for USB charging. The Apple packaging looks more like a rip-off of the Wii's packaging to me. Every smart phone and tablet I've seen comes in a box that's roughly the size of the width/height of the device, so when you open it up you have the screen staring you in the face. The reason all this stuff is so similar is because it's *so damn common and obvious.*

      Link 3: a placeholder graphic didn't get replaced for production. Oh God, it's the end of the fucking world. The funniest thing about this one though is that the last paragraph from Link 3 directly debunks part of the bitching from Link 2, so that's a nice little bonus.

      Yes, seriously.

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    29. Re:Hey, buddy. by Bucky24 · · Score: 1

      Well back in the day that was a fairly revolutionary idea...

      --
      All the world's a CPU, and all the men and women merely AI agents
    30. Re:Hey, buddy. by semiotec · · Score: 1

      oh yes, like pieces of paper on my desk never ever overlap.

    31. Re:Hey, buddy. by Bucky24 · · Score: 1

      Be careful about saying that, you might be in violation of a patent ;)

      --
      All the world's a CPU, and all the men and women merely AI agents
    32. Re:Hey, buddy. by CheerfulMacFanboy · · Score: 1

      You're wrong about the overlapping windows (and IMO the desktop metaphor, albeit without a trash can):

      Xerox Star

      While Xerox did have overlapping windows, Apple's implementation was much more efficient. It didn't need to redraw every window from bottom to top when a window was moved, while Apple even allowed updating of non-top-of-stack windows.

      Now imagine if Apple had patented that.

      --
      Fandroids hate facts.
  6. Bullshit Description by VJmes · · Score: 2

    Can we have a description that isn't plainly biased toward either Apple or Samsung with these patent lawsuit stories?

    1. Re:Bullshit Description by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Last time I made a comment about Apple democratizing "App Store" when all the other stores were things different like "Steam", and then everyone wanting to get on the copycat bandwagon, I was deemed a troll.

      So now on this topic, with courts actually agreeing on Apple's side that Samsung is actually copying Apple's designs, I'm sorry but I got other things to do with my hard-earned excellent Slashdot reputation than to lose it to fanboys who can't seem to understand the difference between a troll and an argument. So I'll stay a coward, thank you.

      I would wish to have educated non biased discussions, but it will not happen. Slashdot has long chosen their camp, and it's Android, Jailbreak, design has nothing to do with it, and console ftw. I submit to you the Original iPod review: http://slashdot.org/story/01/10/23/1816257/apple-releases-ipod ... comments are ... Insightful :)

    2. Re:Bullshit Description by GumphMaster · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Sure:

      In the latest edition of the Apple vs. Samsung patent fight, the ABC is reporting that Samsung has filed in Australian and Japanese courts seeking an injunction to halt sales of the iPhone 4S for alleged 3G patent violations. It remains to be seen whether Samsung has any better luck with the retaliatory strike in Australian and Japanese courts than it did with courts in the Netherlands. I expect that Samsung will fail partly because of overseas precedent, but mostly because their patents are technical and narrow in scope.

      Happier now?

      For the record I do not own any Apple product, any Android based device (Samsung or other), or a mobile phone. I hold shares in neither company. Ultimately, I couldn't care less about these particular two devices, but I do care about the collateral damage to innovation caused by the patents-as-weapons mentality regardless of who is wielding it.

      --
      Patent litigation: A doctrine of Mutually Assured Destruction... in which everyone seems willing to push the button
    3. Re:Bullshit Description by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      well said

    4. Re:Bullshit Description by Dr+Max · · Score: 0

      I don't agree with many of Samsung design choices but I will fight to the death for their right to implement and sell them.

      --
      Rocket Surgeon.
    5. Re:Bullshit Description by Kartu · · Score: 2

      Name those "designs" that "courts actually agreeing on Apple's side" please.
      So far we only have:
      1) Duesseldorf judge agreeing that rectangular shape with round corners can be patented (unlike her Dutsch colleagues)
      2) Dutch court disagreeing with most but one of Apple's claim ("obvious" / "prior art"), with a single exception in gallery view app, which is covered by updating to newer Android anyway

      What are "all those courts" pretty please?

    6. Re:Bullshit Description by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Spoken like a true Rocket Surgeon. Who knows nothing about why they're being sued. Because of their design choices.

    7. Re:Bullshit Description by CheerfulMacFanboy · · Score: 0

      I don't agree with many of Samsung design choices but I will fight to the death for their right to implement and sell Apple's.

      FTFY

      --
      Fandroids hate facts.
    8. Re:Bullshit Description by Dr+Max · · Score: 1

      God damn cheefmacfanboy, Who cares if they look a little similar or if you use them the same way. No one is going to walk in to a store and buy the wrong one. Competition is a good thing we have already seen how it's improved both brands (let alone every other industry in the world) alot of android features have shown up in ios, and i would much prefer to see this lawyer money spent on hologram and HUD R&D. I know you don't really care cause you will only ever buy apple and will love what ever they give you but, this kind of behavior doesn't benefit the consumer.

      --
      Rocket Surgeon.
    9. Re:Bullshit Description by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      They won't fail because their patents are technical and narrow in scope, they will fail because the patents are part of an international standard and when that standard was being devised samsung agreed that it would licence the patents to any company that asked at a fair and non discriminatory price.

      Source: http://www.techworld.com.au/article/404221/#closeme
      As linked to by: http://apple.slashdot.org/story/11/10/17/0325220/dutch-court-rejects-samsung-patent-claims-against-apple

      It not being cool to RTFA is promoting ignorance over informed opinion and is no different to the Jocks and Nerds high school bullshit.

    10. Re:Bullshit Description by Miamicanes · · Score: 1

      I believe that Samsung's strategic goal here is to get a court to reason that at least some of the claims Apple is suing them about constitute fundamental technologies that are as necessary to a modern phone as Samsung's. They'll fail in a court that interprets the black letter of the law, but if the legal roulette wheel happens to stop on the green "00", they *might* get enough of a win to buy a few more years to play tit-for-tat with Apple.

      Legally, their case is poor. Equitably, the fact that Apple is being unsportsmanlike and trying to take away consumer freedom to run anything besides Apple's tastefully-appointed, but authoritarian and censored IOS might give Samsung enough of an edge in an American/Australian/British/Canadian court to tip over the "Apple Cart".

      IMHO, the ultimate revenge would be for Google to "accidentally" leak a fully-functioning copy of Ice Cream Sandwich, ready to reflash onto a jailbroken iPhone 4S. Oooooh, I can hear the delicious cries from Cupertino now, and see the happy guerrilla parade through downtown Cupertino of liberated iPhone owners singing "Shine Sweet Freedom". Maybe build a symbolic jail (well, ok... "fort") of neatly-stacked ice cream sandwiches around Steve Jobs' etched-glass iTombstone, and position little green Android statues around it as symbolic guards. Maybe stick a Tux doll on top of the tombstone itself. Simultaneously disrespectful, but oh-so-cute, and likely to end up on the cover of Time magazine with the word "iCoup!" (I'll stop now, and won't play on the obvious pun of "iCoup" with a 3 lines of poetry having 5, 7, and 5 syllables).

    11. Re:Bullshit Description by Dr+Max · · Score: 1

      I still don't think it matters. Samsung 'copying' apple in the tablet game hasn't actually done that well. Asus and acer make quite nice tablets with better features. Motorola has the high end sorted and been out for longer. You can't hope to sway an apple customer; even if Samsung completely copied apple and was half the price would you buy samsung? The people that want the Samsung tablet is either for the oled screen or out of brand loyalty, if it had sharper corners or a button in a slightly different place it wouldn't get any less customers.

      --
      Rocket Surgeon.
    12. Re:Bullshit Description by andydread · · Score: 1

      All fun and joke and bias aside does apple compete without copyiing? other's concepts? I mean they didn't create the GUI the just brought it to the consumer marketplace. They didn't create the touch screen rectangular tablet they just brought it to the consumer market. They didn't create music downloading software Napster was there first. What if Naptser patented the concept of music download software?

    13. Re:Bullshit Description by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      The major patents Samsung is asserting are standards-based patents, which they are obligated to license for a reasonable price. Apparently, Samsung has demanded exorbitant license fees from Apple, and the courts have so far taken a dim view of this. Apple, on the other hand, has asserted patents that are not so encumbered, and which they are not obligated to license at all if they do not choose to do so.

    14. Re:Bullshit Description by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your ideas intrigue me and I wish to subscribe to your newsletter.

    15. Re:Bullshit Description by VGPowerlord · · Score: 1

      Last time I made a comment about Apple democratizing "App Store" when all the other stores were things different like "Steam", and then everyone wanting to get on the copycat bandwagon, I was deemed a troll.

      Democratizing? What, can we vote now on what apps appear in the app store?

      --
      GLaDOS for President 2016! "Well here we are again. It's always such a pleasure." -- GLaDOS, 2011
    16. Re:Bullshit Description by Coren22 · · Score: 0

      Apparently, Samsung has demanded the same license fees they ask of everyone, and Apple wouldn't pay up.

      FTFY. Samsung is asserting this statement, Apple refuses to pay for the licenses. Nokia already got Apple to settle for the exact same problem.

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    17. Re:Bullshit Description by CheerfulMacFanboy · · Score: 1

      Yeah, all Apple ever did was making stuff cheap enough and easy to use enough that mere mortals can actually get their hands on it.

      --
      Fandroids hate facts.
    18. Re:Bullshit Description by CheerfulMacFanboy · · Score: 1

      So you admit that there is no good reason for Samsung to copy Apple's design.

      --
      Fandroids hate facts.
    19. Re:Bullshit Description by CheerfulMacFanboy · · Score: 1

      Xerox didn't invent anything you N00b - they stole it all from Engelbart. CUADYLPOS

      --
      Fandroids hate facts.
    20. Re:Bullshit Description by Dr+Max · · Score: 1

      Yeah pretty much but it's barely copying, and i would much prefer to live in a world where people are free to make the best possible product they want. That goes for apple as well, even though i will probably never own an apple product (unless they make a good full blown watch phone) i still wouldn't like to see ifans miss out on the iphone x because of some big business bitching.

      --
      Rocket Surgeon.
  7. Not (primarily) about round-rects by Ster · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ... (unlike the patent-a-rectangle nature of the opposition) ...

    As previously stated, it's not a patent on round-rects:

    I came across this yesterday and found it interesting (comparisons of what Samsung's tablets looked like before and after the iPad came out):

    It seems like it's not quite as silly as it's usually been presented. (Don't get me wrong, I do think it's silly.)

    -Ster

    1. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 3, Informative

      It's not just that. It's also shit like this.

      That came from this/ screen cap.

      It's absurd.

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
    2. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Interesting comparisons. Just from the first link (hardware design), it looks like there's a better case that Samsung is copying Apple on phones than it is on tablets. (Incidentally, the iPad trademark matches the earlier Samsung picture frame on every single point, which is even closer than the match between the iPhone and the Galaxy S.)

      As far as interface icons are concerned, I'm not sure what the law says, but from a practical point of view I think it's best to encourage companies to imitate each others' interfaces whenever possible: it makes it easier for consumers to switch from using one to another.

    3. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by skine · · Score: 3, Informative

      Yes, we already know that it's not just "round rectangles." Even Gumph.

      What he said was "[...] the patent-a-rectangle nature [...]," emphasis mine.

      Even taken all together, Apple's design patent could be used to take practically all smartphones off the market, and certain aspects have been common in computers and phones for over a decade. The "patent-a-rectangle" part is just highlighting one obviously silly piece of a silly patent.

    4. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      As previously stated, it's not a patent on round-rects:

      From the link you provided, the only relevant difference between the Samsung Q1 UMPC (released 3 years before the iPad) and the Galaxy Tab (released 7 months later) is the rounding of the corners. (See your first link, at the bottom right: there are two green ticks next to the Galaxy Tab which correspond to yellow dashes next to the Q1 UMPC, and both of them refer to the curved corners.)

      So yes, this is about a patent on rounded rectangles: or at least, that's what the evidence you quoted implies.

    5. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by Anthony+Mouse · · Score: 1

      They're claiming that stuff as trademarks? Wow, that's even worse than rounded rectangles.

      The purpose of a trademark is designation of origin. It isn't supposed to be a user interface patent, or a method to lock in users by preventing competitors from creating a product that customers familiar with the trademark holder's product will have an easier time learning to use.

    6. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by Kenja · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I like how they have an angled picture of the Q1 so you cant see that other then having more buttons, it is basically the same rounded corner rectangle as the iPad. Its just a different aspect ratio and is used in landscape mode primarily. Sound familiar?

      Regardless of if Samsung did "copy" Apple, the idea that Apple should own a shape should be fought. Especially when that shape is the only practical one for tablets (and always has been).

      --

      "Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
    7. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by MrDoh! · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Trouble is, even looking at that list, when you see;
      https://plus.google.com/u/0/100241261662852079434/posts/En6cqNeQqDJ
      on shows aired in 2003, that were rectangular glass fronted, rounded edges portable machines, it all appears obvious that Apple haven't really invented much, just taken what's out there and put polish on it. The move to better screens, everyone was leaving resistive behind.
      Why do people link to just some of Samsung's designs with dates and skips things like;
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JooJoo
      that was released March 2010 and shown before the iPad was even publically admitted to exist.

      You can look at Apple's kit and say 'yeah, they look great, but truly innovative? or just another design style that the industry was moving to anyway, for some things, Apple got there first, for some things, they got there late, but still claimed they invented it.

      I think that's what winds most people up about this, we've got devices on our desks that are claimed to be infringing that are obviously not, or other devices that came out before the ipad/phone but did all the same stuff.

      --
      Waiting for an amusing sig.
    8. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by caseih · · Score: 1

      Just a stupid mockup picture. I mean it is Google Maps and that is an obvious way to do it. As for actual look and feel, the Google Maps app on the samsung does actually look a lot different than the one on the iPhone. And it's not even made by samsung so I don't see why it would apply here anyway.

    9. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 2

      They couldn't even get screen caps from their own product!

      It's on samsung's site! What the hell?

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
    10. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Too right. Can you imagine if cars all had to have a different look and feel. No you can't put your accelerator there that's where ford put it, and all the other floor locations are taken so you have to put a hand accelerator on the roof.

    11. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, the Q1 is not basically the same rounded corner rectangle. It's design is far more different from the Galazy Tab than the Galaxy Tab is from the iPad. Notice:

      1. The Q1's corners have a very small circumference rounding -- much smaller than the Galaxy or iPad.
      2. The long edges of the Q1's rectangle also have a taper (extremely large circumference rounding) that neither the Galaxy or iPad have.
      3. The Q1's shorter edges of the rectangle have a front-to-back rounding that is completely missing from both the Galaxy and the iPad.
    12. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      That comparison is somewhat useful, but it doesn't tell the whole story. As it stands, it looks somewhat biased by omission. What did other manufacturers icons/design look like before the iphone was released? What did Samsung's other phones look like prior to the release of the iPhone? (Don't need to show all of them for each patent, just the closest to the iphone design.)

      Examples:
      Samsung: (colour scheme) J200, P310,
      LG: Prada's design, four icons at the bottom of the screen, and the Prada's "phone" icon. (You'll note that Apple haven't sued LG over "their" design)
      Motorola: A1000 (Grid of icons)
      Nokia 7710 (see grid, icons)

      While it is interesting to show two Samsung models before and after the iphone, it doesn't capture all relevant information.

    13. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah! It's about patenting primary colours, number of icons, and a rectangular box!

      How dare Samsung violate Apple's innovative patents about box shape!

    14. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by shellbeach · · Score: 1

      I came across this yesterday and found it interesting (comparisons of what Samsung's tablets looked like before and after the iPad came out)

      The problem is that these troll pages pretend that there was only ever Apple and Samsung designing phones and tablets. That wasn't the case.

      If I wanted to play the same game, I'd say that the iPad is itself designed from the rounded-rectangle tablet PCs that came before it, like this and the iPhone from the PDAs that came before it, like this.

    15. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by FireFury03 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      As far as interface icons are concerned, I'm not sure what the law says, but from a practical point of view I think it's best to encourage companies to imitate each others' interfaces whenever possible: it makes it easier for consumers to switch from using one to another.

      Well yes and no. Yes it makes it easier for customers to switch between devices, but it also limits their choice because maybe the customer doesn't _want_ the interface to look like that.

      As an example, several years ago I was looking around for a new phone. I was considering an HTC Dream (which I did buy in the end), but the salesman at the Carphone Warehouse was doing his level best to tell me that I didn't want an HTC Dream because it wasn't very iphone-like (it had a hard keyboard rather than an on-screen keyboard) and kept directing me to various other phones because they were "more iphone-like". He didn't seem to be able to grasp the concept that I didn't *want* an iPhone clone, I was specifically looking for a phone with a hard keypad and if I wanted something like the iPhone I'd probably have just damned well bought an iPhone!

      Whilst I will accept that having the same interface everywhere is good in environments where you are constantly switching between several devices that do essentially the same job, in an environment where you own and use a single device for this job (which is usually the case with phones) then it would seem more sensible to give the user a UI that they find pleasant and efficient to work with rather than forcing everyone to use the same interface that may well not work for them. This applies equally to other devices, such as desktop PCs - as another example, I find having my PC set to do sloppy-focus so that I can rapidly switch between and work on half-hidden windows. It is a minor inconvenience when I have to use someone else's PC that isn't set up like this, but it would seriously harm my working efficiency if I was unable to set my own workstation how I wanted. Since 99% of my time is spent working on my own workstation, it makes the most sense to have it configured in the best way for *me* (and then having to deal with some inconvenience on the 1% of the time I use a different machine) than it would be to have a lowest-common-denominator setup where everything is identical(ly crap).

    16. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      They could have mocked up their own picture, but Samsung find it too easy to copy. In fact it's a screen grab from 2008. Lazy Samaung

      http://www.blogher.com/apps-make-iphone-and-ipod-touch-game-changers-tech?page=0,1

    17. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by Hentes · · Score: 1

      No, it's a trademark on round rectangles. Oh sorry, black round rectangles. Still ridiculos claim. Good, LEGO only lost their rectangle trademark a few years ago it's time for someone to take it again.

    18. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Then look at this one.

      This comparison shows the same bias as those bullshit "tablets before and after iPad" pics, chosing products for "before" to make it look like Samsung was in stone age before Apple instead of Samsung evolving alongside Apple.

    19. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by Terrasque · · Score: 4, Informative
      --
      It's The Golden Rule: "He who has the gold makes the rules."
    20. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by CheerfulMacFanboy · · Score: 2

      Interesting comparisons. Just from the first link (hardware design), it looks like there's a better case that Samsung is copying Apple on phones than it is on tablets. (Incidentally, the iPad trademark matches the earlier Samsung picture frame on every single point,

      Ohh? Let's check every single point (and not just the front) mkay?

      --
      Fandroids hate facts.
    21. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From my recollection of my product development course, there are three ways to do product development:
            - As a bleeding edge innovator, where you have high R&D and hope for high margins by being first,
            - In the second wave, where you have lower R&D costs (mimicking and refining the existing products) with moderate margins,
            - As a commodity producer, where you basically buy a cheap design and produce it cheaper than everyone else.

      Now Apple, fitting nicely into the 2nd category (not the first touchscreen, not the first phone, not the first phone with music player, etc. etc..) did a particularly good job of refining the existing designs and products into a very good productline. Also, being litigeous, canny and big, they are pulling out every stop they can to 'defend' against anyone commoditising their product in the near future and to maintain their advantage as long as possible.

      Looking at the parent's peanutbuttereggdirt links, the first thing that comes to mind is that to claim someone is infringing a trade-mark, you have to show that they are infringing a decent number (all) of the claimed features. If that weren't the case, I'm sure I'd be able to find a lot of prior art / copyright / trade-mark infringments in the Apple icons etc. For example, even old nokias associated green, a stylised handset and a rounded rectangle with involking a telephone call (see the first apple icon). Apple has trade-marked a stipled, green button with a while stylised handset, finished with a 'glass bead' 3D effect - in my opinion that doesn't make them a particularly nice corporate citizen, since they are trying to monopolise basic usability, but on the other hand you can't really blame them for trying.

      As an aside, just imagine what the world would be like if anyone had trademarked the handset receiver shape and the yellow pages had done the same with a book with a stylised portrait on the front. We'd all be staring at buttons with unintelligable blobs on them. To be honest, I want standardisation of iconography for standard functions - sure go nuts with the styling, but don't put me in a position where I can't make an emergency call on someone else's handset because I didn't guess the pink extension cord plugging in involks the phone function.

    22. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by itsdapead · · Score: 1

      ...and the iPhone from the PDAs that came before it, like this [typepad.com].

      Or maybe, this. Oh, wait, that was made by Apple, so I guess they're allowed to copy it.

      --
      In a survey of 100 programmers, 111111 thought that duck-typing was a good idea.
    23. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by CheerfulMacFanboy · · Score: 1

      You can pretend that car manufacturers don't sue for obvious knock-offs all you want - they still do.

      --
      Fandroids hate facts.
    24. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by itsdapead · · Score: 1

      Someone already did make an antitroll image

      Interesting that they chose to omit the Galaxy Tab 10 from the "after iPad - reality" images. Of course, if they did it might spoil the message by reinforcing how many post-iPad tablet makers have come up with designs that don't shamelessly ape the iPad.

      Note, I agree that the only beneficiaries of this silly patent war will be the lawyers - but trying to deny that the iPhone and iPad have hugely influenced the design of phones and tablets - and that the Samsung Galaxy products haven't been influenced more than most - requires a reality distortion field of at least 10000 miliJobs.

      --
      In a survey of 100 programmers, 111111 thought that duck-typing was a good idea.
    25. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by CheerfulMacFanboy · · Score: 2

      As previously stated, it's not a patent on round-rects:

      From the link you provided, the only relevant difference between the Samsung Q1 UMPC (released 3 years before the iPad) and the Galaxy Tab (released 7 months later) is the rounding of the corners.

      You should immediately seek a doctor to check your eyesight.

      --
      Fandroids hate facts.
    26. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by JAlexoi · · Score: 1

      And no other company has made goofy screen caps? Apple is no exception.

    27. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why don't you compare that patent with iPad (which doesnt't look like that in profile and has a button where patent shows none)?

    28. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The difference! I don't see it! Now I'm unable to think! NOOOOOOOooooooooooo.................

    29. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by ToTheBone · · Score: 1

      Wow! Amazing... I didn't know the copying was that bad.
      Both the iPhone AND the newer Samsung product look a LOT like the older Samsung product and seem like a very logical evolution from it.
      The iPhone is almost an exact copy of the older Samsung with only a chrome rim and some colour added to the icons.

    30. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by Theaetetus · · Score: 1

      Yes, we already know that it's not just "round rectangles." Even Gumph.

      What he said was "[...] the patent-a-rectangle nature [...]," emphasis mine.

      Even taken all together, Apple's design patent could be used to take practically all smartphones off the market, and certain aspects have been common in computers and phones for over a decade. The "patent-a-rectangle" part is just highlighting one obviously silly piece of a silly patent.

      No, it really couldn't. Design patents are very, very narrow. You almost have to work to infringe them, say, by making your product look almost identical to the competition so that a consumer seeing it may be confused for a second and think it's yours. Design patents are a lot like trade dress.

    31. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Usually the look of something can be trademarked. After all the Apple logo is trademarked. The iTunes icon is probably trademarked. The purpose is mainly to prevent knock offs. For example the shape of the Coca-Cola bottle is trademarked. Now Coke isn't saying you can't sell soda. It's saying can't copy their bottle and use red with white lettering as part of your design.

    32. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 2

      Yeah, but those tablets aren't selling. Those tablets aren't in the, "Let's chase after the iPad" tablet market segment.

      I love Apple's products, and I despise Apple's lawsuits based on look and feel(Apple's a big boy company with lots of lawyers to argue this in court; they don't need me)...

      But the thing that sticks in my craw about the whole mess is how the consumer electronics industry turned on a dime to mimic the iPad. It's disgusting to think that companies like Palm, HP, Lenovo, et al, could build iPad caliber products but it just isn't in their corporate ecosystem to do so.

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
    33. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

      when has apple taken a screen cap of someone else's product?

      Samsung's also copied UI assets from Microsoft's MSN service too a few years back.

      This isn't new for Samsung.

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
    34. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right... So according to those links:

      -It's a trademark rather than patent
      -It's about several roundrects (and comparable things) instead of just one instance
      -ipad borrows more stuff from q1 than galaxy tab does from ipad. (although between iphone/galaxy s/f700 it goes the other way around)

      After reading this bullshit I pretty much think that both sides should stick their "intellectual property" to their nearest orifice asap and that those responsible for current state of legislation should be fed to rabid badgers. After that everyone should be happy.

    35. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by CheerfulMacFanboy · · Score: 1

      Trouble is, even looking at that list, when you see; https://plus.google.com/u/0/100241261662852079434/posts/En6cqNeQqDJ on shows aired in 2003, that were rectangular glass fronted, rounded edges portable machines,

      Sorry, I don't see a fully glass fronted flat surface portable machine there. Nor do I just pick the cherries out of Apple's claims just so I can just match any shit that comes along to it. My fault entirely.

      --
      Fandroids hate facts.
    36. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by tgibbs · · Score: 2

      It is clear that Apple created something. After all, other companies had tried to create tablet computers, but none had achieved much mass market penetration. The technology was there for any company to create an iPad like device, but none did. Indeed, the conventional wisdom was that tablet computers would not sell, and that consumers preferred cheap netbooks. Other companies were making smartphones, including touch capabilities, before the iPhone, but none achieved the iPhone's success.

      So clearly Apple created something that was special and unique--so much so that it is now being widely imitated. Indeed, virtually all of Apple's competitors are now offering devices with look and feel far closer to the iDevices than what they were selling before. Why shouldn't companies that make this kind of contribution be rewarded with a limited term monopoly? If the current patent/copyright system does not adequately protect what Apple created, whether it is the invention of new technology or simply combining existing hardware and software technologies in a distinctive way that is perceived by both consumers and competitors as offering substantial added value, then perhaps we need a new category of patents that does protect this kind of achievement.

      Not only do such patents support the existence of companies that introduce unique and successful design ideas into the marketplace, but they also encourage other companies to innovate rather than simply copying what is already in the marketplace. For example, it is generally agreed that the WebOS and Windows devices are not imitative of Apple. And if it ultimately turns out that Apple has found the absolute best way to make a tablet or a phone...well, those patents will expire in a couple of decades.

    37. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by CapuchinSeven · · Score: 1

      ...do you actually know what's going on? I'll be frank, you're saying words and I don't think you know what they mean, please go and look up "trade dress".

    38. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by delinear · · Score: 1

      I suspect that's intentional - the troll images pointedly show only devices that support a very narrow, specific point. This goes the opposite way in suggesting that there's actually far more diversity since iPad, but it does so as a tongue in cheek exercise. In reality there was diversity before AND after, and a lot of devices do end up looking the same or very similar, not because everyone is stealing each other's ideas, but because there's only so much you can do with the technology and still have it usable. If you said to a hundred designers here's your brief, you have a big, touch sensitive screen, maybe one to five hard buttons, it needs to weigh this much, here's the footprint for the internal hardware and a user has to be able to comfortable hold and use it for prolonged periods, even in a world where the iPad didn't exist I'd not be surprised to see 20-25% of the designs come back very similar to iPad and maybe another 30-40% looking vaguely similar.

    39. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by Anthony+Mouse · · Score: 1

      The purpose is mainly to prevent knock offs.

      The purpose is to identify the source of the product, not to prohibit functionally or aesthetically similar products. People know that the bottle in the shape of the Coca-Cola bottle is going to get them Coca-Cola, it allows them to save time because they're buying a $1 item and they're not about to spend a lot of time inspecting it first.

      Now tell me how a green picture of a telephone handset on the button to initiate a phone call allows people considering buying a phone to identify it as an Apple device. That isn't a trademark, it's practically an industry standard -- it identifies the action, not the vendor.

      On top of that, it's a $600 device. People do research. Any idiot can tell them apart because one has the Apple logo and the other says Samsung. I mean sure, if you cover up the thing that identifies the product, it's harder to identify the product. But WTF? That doesn't mean anybody is confused.

    40. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by paulsnx2 · · Score: 1

      A dominate product has more influence. But the real question is if there are so many products that look like the iPad before the iPad, where is the uproar about Apple copying *those* designs? Why does Apple get to copy, but nobody else does?

      Measurements on my Jobsmeter give this image a reality distortion field of no more than 10 miliJobs. Apple's own distortions register 1000 miliJobs. Given that these measurements come from my objective Jobsmeter and not my opinion, I think (baring calibration issues) I must be right.

    41. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Read Dilbert much? http://www.dilbert.com/2011-10-18/ Now who's infringing?

    42. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The first link is broken -- is there a mirror?

    43. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by shellbeach · · Score: 1

      Sure -- all PDAs have been a gradual evolution from the original Psion organiser, and the Newton was one of the major influences in that progression (and a great PDA, just ten years too soon). But it'd be crazy to think that the iPhone was designed somehow in a vacuum and didn't pay any attention to Palm (which was the Apple of the late 90s in many ways -- new tech, cult following, "just works", must-have-status-symbol-for-executives) or Psion. And it's all still, ultimately, a continuation of what was conceived at PARC.

      My point is that this "who-copied-whom" game is stupid and pointless. Technology evolves through competition and takes influences from many sources. Apple doesn't have a monopoly on innovation, any more than any company does. I'm not really sure why we can't just acknowledge that and move on and away from these patent wars, which serve no purpose other than to help companies build monopolies.

    44. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've never heard of a car manufacture blocking imports of competitor's cars.

    45. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by crossword.bob · · Score: 1

      What a lot of people are missing (wilfully in many cases, I suspect) is that Apple aren't claiming any single element of their design, but the amalgamation of most or all aspects of it. They do not claim to own a shape, and there are any number of practical tablet designs incorporating rounded rectangles that Apple would make no claim to.

    46. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by godglike · · Score: 1

      Bizarrely the patent system allows Apple to patent what should be a trademarked look.

      Therefore when someone egregiously copies that look, Apple rightly sue them for patent abuse.

      The problem is the patent system.

      It should be narrow and technical but it's not, therefore a litigation about trademark abuse becomes a patent strumach.

    47. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by godglike · · Score: 1

      The 2 thumb pads on the Q1 disappear from the Galaxy.

      Q1 is landscape but the Galaxy is portrait.

      Q1 shows a scrolling list of text, but the Galaxy has icons all but identical in design, colour, and layout to the iPad/iPhone.

      I grant you the patent is stupid, but the Galaxy is not an evolution from the Q1, it's a rip-off of the iPad.

      I'm surprised they didn't call it the Samsung iApplePad.

    48. Re:Not (primarily) about round-rects by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep, I'm convinced. A comparison from an Apple shareholder that gives Apple points of merit for statements like "The color(s) gray, silver and black is/are claimed as a feature of the mark" and "The color gray appears as a rectangle in the front, center of the device. [the screen]" - very objective.

      I particularly like the Jekyyl & Hyde moment where the author tries to argue that the Samsung F700 (which the iP looks notably similar too - more so physically than the SGS to the iP) was "released about a month after the iPhone" .. whilst simultaneously noting than the iP wasn't released until 4 months after the F700. Rotflcopter.

      And yes, the whole of the iPad trademark boils down to a gray/black/silver rounded rectangle. Your sources and cause are a joke.

  8. A clean uncluttered rectangle wasn't that obvious. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > "unlike the patent-a-rectangle nature of the opposition"

    This is Apple's cross to bear, designing and then popularising products of such elegance and simplicity that after they're released, the design appears bleeding obvious. An ex post facto judgment that this is what tablets always were, always should have been, and everybody knows that duh.

    Except nobody bar a few design students with incredible vision (but without the support of large companies) knew it at all. If it was obvious then early 1990s tablet PCs would have soon had the same design.

    If it wasn't for Apple's iPad and iPhone, Samsung's tablets and phones would look like this and this.

  9. Re:A clean uncluttered rectangle wasn't that obvio by sensationull · · Score: 3, Insightful

    > Except nobody bar a few design students with incredible vision (but without the support of large companies) knew it at all. If it was obvious then early 1990s tablet PCs would have soon had the same design.

    Oh you mean like the PADDs in STNG or the ones in all sorts of other SciFi since the 80s. They are the ones with the vision, the SciFi writers, producers and set designers. Apple just managed implementation.

  10. Re:A clean uncluttered rectangle wasn't that obvio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you want a better example of pre and post iPad tablet design, see Are android tablets ripping off iPad?

  11. So I guess we've picked a side then by ZackSchil · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'm so glad to see Slashdot his picked a side in this patent battle. I guess we'll just safely assume that Samsung only tried to submarine the entire 3G standard in retaliation of Apple's legal moves and would have never pulled that shit with less than noble intentions. I guess whenever Apple gets mad because one of their biggest business partners is aping their design cues and ripping off their trade dress, that they are trying to patent rectangles and smother innovation.

    Got it.

    1. Re:So I guess we've picked a side then by MachineShedFred · · Score: 2

      Exactly. It's clear that this summary was written either by a Samsung shill, or someone so incredibly biased it's not even funny.

      Never mind that Samsung tried to Rambus the 3G F/RAND technology pool - that's perfectly OK because they're sticking it to Apple!

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    2. Re:So I guess we've picked a side then by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A trade dress issue is not supposed to be a patent issue. Why won't Apple use the right channels for their dispute? It's simple.

      Using the injunction on patents is a more potent attack that can be delivered even if the case has no REAL merit in reality.

      Patents are not supposed to be given for design. Patents need to be some kind of working device. What Apple is setting the precedent for is indeed the monopoly on the way things look and feel. Regardless of the ridiculous laws, this is not something that should be done in civilized society, despite rampant fanboyism.

      At this point, Apple and the RIAA are looking about the same.

    3. Re:So I guess we've picked a side then by Fahrvergnuugen · · Score: 2

      Same here. I'm really disappointed in the /. communities response to this issue. All of these +5 ratings for comments posted by Apple haters whilst ignoring that Samsung has blatantly ripped off Apple's design and marketing in every possible way instead of coming up with something original on their own.

      --
      Kiteboarding Gear Mention slashdot and get 10% off!
    4. Re:So I guess we've picked a side then by andydread · · Score: 1

      Let me ask you this. Honestly who copied who? When you go here and here can you honestly say Apple didn't copy anyone?

    5. Re:So I guess we've picked a side then by dogmatixpsych · · Score: 1

      Thank you. Someone who actually understands what's going on between the companies. This is less about the specific patents (on Apple's part) than about a business partner (Samsung) taking what Apple did and blatantly copying it. Yes, all the companies copy each other but in this case Samsung is part of Apple's supply line and they happen to come out with devices that are suspiciously similar to iPads and iPhones.

    6. Re:So I guess we've picked a side then by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 2

      I've owned an iPhone 4 and now own a Samsung Galaxy S2 - and so I can testify first-hand that look is not anywhere near as similar as Apple fanbois claim it to be, and in terms of functions it's light years ahead of iPhone - so much so that any claims that "Apple innovates and Samsung copies" are pure BS.

      Then again, the claims that everyone out there is copying from Apple have been floating around since forever, even though the supposed perpetrators always differed. As we all well know, everything worth noticing was invented personally by Steve Jobs and introduced to the market by Apple (and, conversely, if it was introduced to the market by Apple, then it's worth noticing - even if it's the shape of a black rectangle with rounded corners)

    7. Re:So I guess we've picked a side then by mjwx · · Score: 1

      that's perfectly OK because they're sticking it to Apple!

      Oh noes,

      Someone stop people doing to Apple what Apple does to other people. Turnabout is fair play. Would Samsung be suing Apple if Apple didn't sue Samsung first? (the answer is NO).

      Apple bought this on themselves, now they are crying foul. Well you made your bed, good luck getting any sleep in it.

      Exactly. It's clear that this summary was written either by a Samsung shill

      It's clear the parent post was written by a fanboy with a very tenuous connection to reality.

      If you dont like facts, it's easier just to attack ad hominem.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    8. Re:So I guess we've picked a side then by Kartu · · Score: 1

      Could you have a look at this:
      http://www.blogcdn.com/www.engadget.com/media/2006/03/samsungpictureframe.jpg

      Then this:
      https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-kNKGiOZzAXI/Tmn0ElsA4PI/AAAAAAAAHNo/aK3FT0z-9zI/3AlUc.jpg

      And stop spreading myths about "rip off"? The worst part is about rounded rectangular icons. Maybe one out of ten on my Galaxy S looks like that.

    9. Re:So I guess we've picked a side then by Kartu · · Score: 1

      Isn't it iPad tht is suspiciously simliar to Samsung Photo Frame (2006)

      That whole "business partner" thing is about Samsung selling hardware parts to Apple, not assembling final products, the latter is done by Foxconn slaves.

    10. Re:So I guess we've picked a side then by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I'm a 'fanboy.'

      Paraphrasing your own signature: Calling someone a "fanboy" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.

      FYI - my position on this isn't on either side. Apple's patents are ridiculous and shouldn't have ever been granted. Samsung is trying to set a dangerous precedent of being able to sue licensees of F/RAND technology pools because the licensee is doing something they don't like. What happens if they win? Do they start suing everyone else that didn't put tech into the 3G pool because it's a new revenue stream? Because no company in the history of technology has ever done THAT before...

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
  12. Re:Not-quite-objective summary by tlhIngan · · Score: 0

    I have to admit, I keep getting fooled at Best Buy.

    I took a walk down their tablet aisle. I can easily tell the Android tablets from each other, but the damn Galaxy Tab and the iPad confuse me constantly.

    One thing I noticed yesterday while looking was how Acer, Asus, Toshiba, etc. went and differentiated themselves from the iPad. The Toshiba has a little silvery spot by the camera on front. The Acers and Asus have token trim pieces that break up the glass-to-metal-rim look of the iPad. The Sony's a wedge but has that nice rounded corner on top. All very easily Not-An-iPad looking thing. Heck, the closest I could come to iPad would be a PlayBook, but it's 7" screen makes it so small it's easy to tell.

    Hell, those 7" tablets all look very similar to me - I'm surprised Samsung doesn't go after Acer and RIM for their 7" tablets - they really look similar.

    It also didn't help that the iPads were in landscape mode.

    Samsung: Make your tablet distinct. Add some trim pieces like Acer/Asus/Toshiba/Sony did, or add a nice little stripe around the bezel or something. Hell, do the popular thing and make the frame customizable and sell various colored and patterned bezels! (Pink is a popular color amongst the fairer sex, hint hint. Pink gadgets SELL)

  13. Illiterate troll? by mveloso · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Maybe if you actually read the patent and had some imagination you'd realize that there are different ways of doing things.

    Apple's design process: let's do lots of research as to what works and doesn't, both in software and hardware.
    Samsung's design process: let's copy Apple's.

    Can Samsung's UX team point out exactly how they designed all of Samsung's hardware and software? Why do their icons look that way? Why have the sheen/gloss instead of a flat look? Why not make the icons circular vignettes instead of rounded squares? Why taper the back of your device just so?

    They can't, because their work is basically Apple's work.

    Samsung's UX and R&D team are sitting in Cupertino inside 1 Infinite Loop. Their secondary teams are in a Samsung facility sitting around and changing some little things here and there.

    Have you ever seen any interviews with their design and UX teams? No. That's because they don't exist.

    Have you ever heard the name of their head UI person? You'd think that, given the success of the Samsung tablet, that the person would be giving interviews left and right. Anyone? Anyone?

    Here's an analogy that even a closed-minded geek can understand. You have a Wii, XBox 360, and a PS3. Which one of them looks like the other? They all have an optical drive and a bunch of A/V output ports. Could you, at a glance, mistake one for another?

    1. Re:Illiterate troll? by khchung · · Score: 1

      Where are mod points when you need them??

      The console analogy nailed it right on the head.

      The 2G phone models is another similar case. We have so many different models of 2G phones, all are basically rectangularish with a button pad and a display, with earpiece and mic at both ends. Yet when you take a phone each from two manufacturers, you can distinguish the two most of the time, as all of them are trying to make phones that are distinct from other manufacturers.

      Another example would be cars (automobiles for your Americans). All are basically a rectangular block on top of 4 wheels, with 2 or 4 doors. Yet you would have no problem identifying one zooming past you in a second or two.

      To claim that the iPad design is somehow obvious, you have to totally ignore all the various tablet designs that came before it, but didn't sell as well.

      --
      Oliver.
    2. Re:Illiterate troll? by exomondo · · Score: 1

      Could you, at a glance, mistake one for another?

      What would be the net result even if you could? At a glance you could quite easily mistake the AppleTV for a Western Digital Elements, doesn't really have any impact though. I bought a macbook air because of what it functionally is (running OSX), if samsung came out with an notebook that looked the same that wouldn't have changed my mind. Same with the ipad, i bought it because that's what i wanted - i don't particularly like the iphone but i wanted iOS apps - and a galaxy tablet would not have worked.

    3. Re:Illiterate troll? by caseih · · Score: 1

      Lots of people cannot tell one car from another. Does that mean one infringes on the design of another? Certainly not now. Maybe at one point in time a company designed the current pedal system (clutch, break, accelerator), and the standard PRNDL indicator for an automatic transmission. Should that have been protected? I dunno.

      Personally I love my Galaxy S. But I don't care that it looks vaguely similar to an iphone (very few people think it's an iphone when I pull it out... the iPhone is very blocky compared to the galaxy S). As long as it was comfortable to hold to my ear (unlike some HTC phones that bite into you), I could care less about the color and exact shape. Despite me thinking that Apple's patent is ridiculous, it does seem like Samsung could get out of this easily if they wanted to and it would still be a great phone.

    4. Re:Illiterate troll? by pookemon · · Score: 1

      Oh crap - I just bought a Samsung instead of an Apple.

      Now I'm going hungry...

      --
      dnuof eruc rof aixelsid
    5. Re:Illiterate troll? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here's an analogy that even a closed-minded geek can understand. You have a Wii, XBox 360, and a PS3. Which one of them looks like the other? They all have an optical drive and a bunch of A/V output ports. Could you, at a glance, mistake one for another?

      Your comment needs to have the shit modded out of it, and upwards. This, this times a thousand.

    6. Re:Illiterate troll? by bloodhawk · · Score: 2

      The console analogy is a horribly flawed one. the look of a console apart from size has little to no effect on its use or function, The size and shape of a phone or tablet directly affect their functionality and use, tablets and phones have changed very little asthetically in the last 5 to 10 years, they are still the same basic shape and size they were long before samsung and apple came up with their designs. disgusted though I am to suggest it, a better analogy would be cars where the size and shape also affect its function and many people also struggle with telling car brands apart.

    7. Re:Illiterate troll? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where are mod points when you need them??

      The console analogy nailed it right on the head.

      The 2G phone models is another similar case. We have so many different models of 2G phones, all are basically rectangularish with a button pad and a display, with earpiece and mic at both ends. Yet when you take a phone each from two manufacturers, you can distinguish the two most of the time, as all of them are trying to make phones that are distinct from other manufacturers.

      Another example would be cars (automobiles for your Americans). All are basically a rectangular block on top of 4 wheels, with 2 or 4 doors. Yet you would have no problem identifying one zooming past you in a second or two.

      To claim that the iPad design is somehow obvious, you have to totally ignore all the various tablet designs that came before it, but didn't sell as well.

      The issue isn't whether or not Samsung's tablet is distinctive from the iPad. It looks pretty similar. This issue is that Apple's design patent is really vague. In terms of the analogy of cars (that is cars for Americans, btw), Apple's patent would be on having a rectangular block on top of 4 wheels with no mention of doors at all. The special design features they would claim in the patent are that it will have clear coat over the paint, and that the overall dimensions of the engine compartment will be roughly the size needed to contain the hardware. Their drawing in the patent wouldn't have any doors, but they would have eventually designed it with a very distinctive door on the roof of the car. Their competitor would have also put a door there. And even though their patent was meaningless, placing a door there would make it seem too similar to most people.

    8. Re:Illiterate troll? by Undead+Waffle · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Can Samsung's UX team point out exactly how they designed all of Samsung's hardware and software? Why do their icons look that way? Why have the sheen/gloss instead of a flat look?

      I don't know about the icons, but most laptops these days are glossy because that's what people tend to buy. This isn't something that started with tablets.

      Why not make the icons circular vignettes instead of rounded squares?

      Because a square shape is much more practical. It gives you more space to work with to come up with a descriptive picture. It's kind of like these things called "icons" some of us have had for decades on our computers. I've seen plenty of rounded icons on non-Apple devices long before the iPad.

      Why taper the back of your device just so?

      Ok, may have been copied. But it's a stupid thing to block a product over.

      Have you ever heard the name of their head UI person? You'd think that, given the success of the Samsung tablet, that the person would be giving interviews left and right. Anyone? Anyone?

      I can't name the head UI person of really any company ever. Most companies don't have celebrity designers.

      Here's an analogy that even a closed-minded geek can understand. You have a Wii, XBox 360, and a PS3. Which one of them looks like the other? They all have an optical drive and a bunch of A/V output ports. Could you, at a glance, mistake one for another?

      Those devices aren't trying to pack relatively standardized parts into the lightest and smallest packages they can. They don't have to support a flat display on the front or fit nicely in your hands. I have some ear buds that look a lot like some old ear buds I had from a previous brand. Should those companies sue each other because there's a limited number of practical ways to make a device fit in the ear?

      I don't know why I'm even responding to an obvious Apple fanboy but that post being modded insightful is absurd.

    9. Re:Illiterate troll? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cool. Now why doesn't Apple go and invent their own 3G access technology.

    10. Re:Illiterate troll? by whoever57 · · Score: 2

      Maybe at one point in time a company designed the current pedal system (clutch, break, accelerator),

      Top Gear did a program on this. The earliest car they could find with what is now the standard layout of controls was (IIRC) a Cadillac.

      --
      The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
    11. Re:Illiterate troll? by clarkn0va · · Score: 1

      You have a Wii, XBox 360, and a PS3...Could you, at a glance, mistake one for another?

      Of course the answer to this question is no, but unfortunately that's the wrong question, because the range of designs that can effectively serve as an appliance that sits near the tv and plays video games is much broader than the range of designs that fits in your hand and plays games or surfs the web.

      Now the real question: You have an XBox 360 controller, a PS3 controller and a Logitech F310 controller. Could you, at a glance, mistake one for another?

      The human hand, unlike a common tv stand, can accommodate and effectively interact with only so much variation in a functional product. In a world without iDevices would Samsung have designed a device with square corners, despite the fact that these are obviously less comfortable to hold and more likely to scratch a person or be damaged during normal use? Would they have opted for a thicker bezel and smaller screen?

      I have no idea to what extent one design team may have copied another, and thank heaven I'm not an IP lawyer or judge, but to say flat out that B must have copied A simply because B has features in common with A is a bit of a leap when not supported by facts, and a kind-of-related-but-not-really comparison of some other tech is not a substitute in the absence thereof.

      --
      I am literally 3000 tokens away from the chaotic crossbow --Stephen
    12. Re:Illiterate troll? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh, wow. Apple rarely does any actual research. It used to not be that way, but it is now. Their usability is "a designer" who "designs" it now, and they market "pretty" as "usability."

      Which is why it sometimes is great and sometimes is terrible. I know, I worked there on several products. This is also why QA can often become a problem for them once the software becomes too complex. There is no real standardized testing to speak of, but most of their software is simple enough with a limited base that only a few hit the edges and get a bomb.

      You really, really are inventing the reality you want to be instead of knowing what is there.

    13. Re:Illiterate troll? by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      The console analogy nailed it right on the head.

      Makes me wonder what history would look like if the "look and feel" of nails, bricks, rope, tiles, etc, were patented.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    14. Re:Illiterate troll? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are biased against non-English speaking countries, and non-cultlike following of brands. Just because you haven't head an interview doesn't mean one does not exist. Besides, the design and UX of the N900 is absolutely brilliant, yet you do not find interviews floating around. Apple achieved mastery of hype and personality worship, so it follows that every product gets dissected every other way. As for your console analogy, it's really not convincing. Console companies can make them look like spaceships, and it wouldn't affect usability. For a tablet, I don't see any other possible design. And because it's 2011, nobody expects buttons to have sharp corners or be round! It's the same on KDE or Gnome and has been for a while. By your logic, my Palm from 2004 would be infringing on Apple's yet-to-be-seen trademark.

    15. Re:Illiterate troll? by Kartu · · Score: 1

      I can't believe this post full of FUD was marked "insightfull"

      Apple ldoes "lots of research as to what works and doesn't both in software and hardware"? Oh, seriously? And this claim is based on what, may I ask? How did "don't hold is that way" phone made it into prod, with company that is focused on anything but shiny design?

      Icons on Samsung's Android phones look quite different from Apple's. In fact most of them are NOT rounded squares.

      I haven't seen interviews with design and UX teams of most companies in this world. That surely proves they dont' exist. / /facepalm

      Consoles do look different. But you can't easily tell who's manufactured particular DSLR.
      Pretty much any product that is pushing into minimalist direct looks similar, TVs or Monitoris for instance.

      In fact there are MANY things in this world, that look alike. And it is more than obvious, that when all you have is small border with big screen, things WILL look similar:

      Samsung's Galaxy Tab, if anything, looks like Motorola Xoom, not iPad:
      http://www.gadgetcage.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/ipad2-vs-xoom-vs-galaxy-tab.jpg

      Lenovo's new 7" tablet can be easily mistaken for Samsung's 7" offering.

    16. Re:Illiterate troll? by Joce640k · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Um, no...because a console's case has no 'function' other than to look exciting and stop people touching the innards.

      A 'pad' computer has to have a touchscreen covering the top side of it. There's no choice about what the principal surface looks like - It's a screen. Period.

      It has to be slim so the side walls are pretty much done. Maybe you can use a different color plastic, I dunno.

      The back has to be flat and smooth so you can lay it down on things.

      That's all sides covered methinks. The only real design choices are whether the corners are rounded and where the connectors go. I don't think Samsung copied Apple's connectors. Arguing about exactly how round the corners are isn't making anybody look intelligent.

      --
      No sig today...
    17. Re:Illiterate troll? by Joce640k · · Score: 1

      Maybe if you actually read the patent and had some imagination

      Maybe if you'd read the 'patent' you'd know, it, ummmm, isn't a patent.

      It's a registered design that's being disputed, ie. the shape.

      Here it is: http://www.scribd.com/doc/61944044/Community-Design-000181607-0001

      If you're going to argue that that particular shape is radically different from dozens of others which came before it or that it's somehow not obvious or simply the next step from designs like the one below then you're an idiot.

      eg. Take away this device's keyboard (which is needed because it's Windows and people expect to be able to do some work, not just 'browse') and it looks an awful lot like an iPad to me: https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/File:Tablet.jpg

      Note date of that photo: 2006

      --
      No sig today...
    18. Re:Illiterate troll? by aztracker1 · · Score: 1

      No, but most CD/DVD/BluRay drives look the same, and I could easily mistake one for another at a glance.. that's it.. Plextor/TDK/Sony Design Patent Battle Royal!!!!

      You design a tablet that is easily hand held with a flat screen, at a widely readable size, that is a compact as possible, and see how many designs you come up with that aren't similar. the iPad itself is very similar to several devices from years before the iPad.

      --
      Michael J. Ryan - tracker1.info
    19. Re:Illiterate troll? by Solandri · · Score: 1

      Can Samsung's UX team point out exactly how they designed all of Samsung's hardware and software?

      Take a step back and just listen to what you're saying:

      Why do their icons look that way? Why have the sheen/gloss instead of a flat look?

      Apple is the only company in the world allowed to make icons with a sheen/glossy look?

      Why not make the icons circular vignettes instead of rounded squares?

      Apple is the only company in the world allowed to make icons with rounded squares?

      Why taper the back of your device just so?

      Apple is the only company in the world allowed to sell products with beveled edges?

      Here's an analogy that even a closed-minded geek can understand. You have a Wii, XBox 360, and a PS3. Which one of them looks like the other? They all have an optical drive and a bunch of A/V output ports. Could you, at a glance, mistake one for another?

      Here's a better analogy. You have a Sony LCD TV, a Samsung LCD TV, and a Sharp LCD TV. Which one of them looks like the other? They all have a big display, power button, channel and volume controls, a bunch of A/V input puts. Could you, at a glance, mistake one for the other? When you make a device which is dominated by the display, they all end up looking pretty similar to each other.

      Rectangular shapes to phones and tablets (and HDTVs) are inevitable because displays are rectangular (due to it being more processor-efficient to address pixels in rectangular arrays.
      Rounded corners are inevitable because people don't like sharp corners poking into them through their pockets.
      Adding highlights and drop shadows to give 2-dimensional drawings a more 3-dimensional look is a centuries-old artist's trick.
      Icons started off square, then started gaining rounded edges around 2000. I wouldn't be surprised if Apple kicked off the trend, but Windows XP had a prominent bubbly look to it too.
      Beveled and rounded edges have been used in designs for handheld products for decades because sharp corners hurt when you hold them in your hand for a long time.

      While most of these design aspects are characteristic of Apple's designs, and I will grant you in some cases Apple started the trend in the industry to use them, none of them are new nor innovative nor ornamental. They are either implementations of age-old artistic designs, or a natural consequence of form following function (which would disqualify them from a design patent).

    20. Re:Illiterate troll? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are 5 different flat tvs in a row.could you, at a glance, mistake one for another? Seriously how do producers of tvs get along?

    21. Re:Illiterate troll? by silentcoder · · Score: 4, Insightful

      >Another example would be cars (automobiles for your Americans). All are basically a rectangular block on top of 4 wheels, with 2 or 4 doors. Yet you would have no problem identifying one zooming past you in a second or two.

      Actually - that's pretty much not true anymore. My previous car was a Ford Fiesta, on many an occasion I would think "oh another ford Fiesta" while driving and realize as I got close enough to see the logo that it was in fact an Opel Corsa (I believe in the USA they are sold as Chevrolet) or a KIA picanto or any other 4-door compact.
      Their shape is all but entirely identical.

      I now drive an Audi A3 and when I'm not close enough to see the logos I cannot distinguish it from any other 2-Dear semi-luxury car, Japanese, Korean, American or German.

      In fact - your argument proves the opposite. Cars shapes are determined - above all - by the laws of aerodynamics. Those laws remain the same regardless of who designs which is why in any given generation most cars converge on the same rough shape - the shape that is - with current engineering skill - the most aerodynamic we can do.
      For any given class of car - that's the same shape. There is only one most aerodynamic shape for a sedan possible, only one for an SUV, only one for a 4x4 and only one for a compact.
      You can easily tell the class - but the maker - from shape and design ? No way - because form has to follow function and the function is constrained by the laws of physics that puts a natural limit on creativity.
      As technology improves the shapes change - but within a year or two everybody else has changed in the exact same way.

      The same thing applies here - there are notable constraints on the design placed by what it has to do. It must be portable, maximize screen space, comfortable to work with, easy to rest on any surface etc.
      In fact the design follows inevitably from the purpose of the device - and all devices converge on it. Star Trek on a purely hypothetical level converged on the exact same design 30 years before the ipad came out.

      As for your silly statements about popularity... did it every occur to you that perhaps Korean's don't have the celebrity obsession of Americans ? Samsung certainly doesn't have the kind of fanboism apple has - and thus there is no celebrity. We don't see interviews with their design head because Samsung's users are not "fans" - just people who chose a product that met their needs, they don't idolize the guy who drew the pictures it was made from. Apple has the same celebrity appeal as Angelina Jolie and the same slavish uncritical love from it's fans.
      Community theater actors may have no less talent, but they don't get followed around by the paparazzi.
      Now whether geek-celebrity as espoused by apple is something we should encourage or not is beside the point -but it is the reason why we never really hear from the designers in other companies. A little bit in Microsoft - but who is the chief UI designer for Oracle ? Who is the chief UI designer at google (whose interfaces I really like for the slick simplicity). Who is the brilliant designer that designed that slick and elegant interface for my Audi's radio system ? It's familiar to anybody whose used a car radio - yet massively advanced over the cheapo that came in my ford. Audi is a company noted for brilliant designs and ergonomics, but nowhere in the press do I read interviews with their designers either.

      Celebrity is an American phenomenon, geek-Celebrity is mostly an Apple pheonomenon, that doesn't mean nobody else HAS people who do these jobs, just that those who do them at other companies don't get interviewed by rolling stone magazine.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    22. Re:Illiterate troll? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have 5 flat tvs in a row. Could you, at a glance, mistake one for another? Seriously how do tv producers get along?

    23. Re:Illiterate troll? by teh+kurisu · · Score: 1

      First of all, there is a huge amount of variety when it comes to bricks, rope and tiles. Nails aren't entirely homogenous either.

      Second, patents last a maximum of 20 years. A patent granted on a brick in the First World War would have expired before the Second World War. History wouldn't really look all that different.

    24. Re:Illiterate troll? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know why I'm even responding to an obvious Apple fanboy but that post being modded insightful is absurd.

      It's not a fanboy; it's probably a paid astroturfer modd'ed up by sock puppets. Deception for profit = fraud.

    25. Re:Illiterate troll? by JAlexoi · · Score: 1

      Here's an analogy that even a closed-minded geek can understand. You have a Wii, XBox 360, and a PS3. Which one of them looks like the other? They all have an optical drive and a bunch of A/V output ports. Could you, at a glance, mistake one for another?

      Quite a flawed analogy. The part that is very similar is the input part. I could mistake a Nintendo controller with XBox controller quite easily. And if you flip over the tablet, there is no way in hell will you not be able to mistake Galaxy Tab from iPad. From the front? Yes. That is the input area. And given that touch is the method of input, the input area will be very similar.* Whereas Wii, PS3 and XBox input methods are different - Nunchuck, Move and Kinect. While the controllers are very similar between the devices.

      But I have to repeat myself - I hope Samsung gets slapped for their TouchWiz UI and smartphone designs. Galaxy Tab? iPad is does not have enough ornamental design to warrant protection, except for the home button.



      * - And if you start with "But Apple isn't suing other tablet manufacturers..." I will remind that Apple has sued Moto over XOOM(of all tablets...) in Germany for the same CD as Galaxy Tab.

    26. Re:Illiterate troll? by JAlexoi · · Score: 1

      Yep, you have to ignore CrunchPad that looked very much like a flat slab with a single flat front surface.
      http://techcrunch.com/2009/06/03/crunchpad-the-launch-prototype/ - Ooops... That's 6 months before iPad...

    27. Re:Illiterate troll? by CODiNE · · Score: 1

      I don't know about the icons, but most laptops these days are glossy because that's what people tend to buy. This isn't something that started with tablets.

      He's talking about the shine on the icons themselves. First used with the iPhone, icons have a light swooping shadow / shine applied to them by the OS. The app developer can turn it off if they desire by setting a property that says the icon already has a shine applied to it's image.

      It makes them look like 3 dimensional rounded buttons and is recommended for consistency unless your icon has a non-reflective surface represented on it such as paper or leather. I'm not sure if anyone else applied gloss or shine effects to icon surfaces before Apple.

      Looking at some Samsung icons I only see the Photos app using an identical shine, the Phone icon uses a shine but it's diagonal and not curved. The other icons are flat without shine.

      Here. Check out that link, it's a very nice design document that gives great examples, I've learned a lot about interface design reading Apple's docs.

      --
      Cwm, fjord-bank glyphs vext quiz
    28. Re:Illiterate troll? by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      Why not make the icons circular vignettes instead of rounded squares?

      Because the basic shape of icons has been a rectangle since icons have been invented?
      Because the basic shape of a bitmap is rectangular by nature?
      BTW, have you looked at your keyboard? What shape do the keys have? Most probably most are rounded squares, and most of the rest rounded rectangles.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    29. Re:Illiterate troll? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I don't know about the icons, but most laptops these days are glossy because that's what people tend to buy. This isn't something that started with tablets.

      Except for all the people who immediately put a matte-finish screen protector on their laptop or phone. Sorry, I think your claim is baseless. Show some numbers to back your assertion.

      Because a square shape is much more practical. It gives you more space to work with to come up with a descriptive picture. It's kind of like these things called "icons" some of us have had for decades on our computers. I've seen plenty of rounded icons on non-Apple devices long before the iPad.

      Is that a quote from Samsung's design team? Or are you just voicing your own opinion? You have no idea why Samsung did that. From all the evidence so far, my guess (which is just as valid as your guess) is that Samsung did it to copy iOS.

      Most companies don't have celebrity designers.

      Except for all the companies that do. A few household names as examples: Chanel. Shelby. Porsche. Gucci. Pei. And just about every other architecture, fashion, personal care, and video game manufacturer. That's hundreds of billions of dollars of industry, bucko. Good thing Ron Popeil doesn't read Slashdot.

      Those devices aren't trying to pack relatively standardized parts into the lightest and smallest packages they can. They don't have to support a flat display on the front or fit nicely in your hands. I have some ear buds that look a lot like some old ear buds I had from a previous brand. Should those companies sue each other because there's a limited number of practical ways to make a device fit in the ear?

      I don't know why I'm even responding to an obvious Apple fanboy but that post being modded insightful is absurd.

      You should open up a Wii sometime. Those relatively standardized parts are packed pretty tightly into that small, light package. Your claim that there are a limited number of practical ways to design a smartphone is basically you admitting that you have zero imagination. Sorry to hear of your affliction, but it does seems to be a shamefully common problem nowadays.

      I wasn't going to bother responding to your obvious Samsung fawning, but your post being modded as insightful is an insult to anyone with creativity or actual insight.

    30. Re:Illiterate troll? by aaaaaaargh! · · Score: 1

      Apple's design process: let's do lots of research as to what works and doesn't, both in software and hardware.
      Samsung's design process: let's copy Apple's.

      You're totally right. Here is an excerpt from a forthcoming Steve Jobs biography that backs up your insight with a little anecdote from the time the iPhone was invented:

      Apple developed a triangular prototype first but Steve Jobs rejected it with the commentary "holy trinity, that's just too Christian for my taste---I"m a satanist". So they had to come up with other designs: apple-shaped ("nice try but impractical"), banana-shaped ("no more fruits, please!"), octahedral ("hmm...this might actually work"), round ("good, good...looks familiar enough...bring it on..."), dodecahedral ("na...looks to much as if we were trying to square the circle"), a line ("could someone fire this idiot, please?"), pentagonal ("perhaps a military version against RIM, but not now, they are their own worst enemy already"), heptagonal ("WTF, this looks like the other one, this octa-thing, what's the fucking difference??"), square ("I like this, I like this, but something is wrong with it, I just can't pin it down yet...")

      Finally, when the Apple designers couldn't come up with new shapes anymore and were already starting to fear their bosses' wrath, Steve Jobs looked out of the window, then at his table, then out of the window again....now back at the table, and with a stroke of genius declared:

      "This is how we do it! We make it like this window! Or, this table. Whatever."

      Everybody was going "Aaaahhhhh!" They couldn't believe how simple and at the meantime ingenious this idea was, but Jobs continued:

      "Anyway, how this weird shape called?"

      "Uhhh, we don't know, sir. It's not in our catalog yet."

      "Then fucking go find out and do what you're paid for, you morons!", the congenial marketeer replied in his truly unforgettabe style.

      However, one young guy---one of the brightest designers at Apple whose talent had not been properly recognized yet at this time, though---had the guts to voice his opinion:

      "Ah, sir, I think it's called a rectangle. Uh...with a black frame around the window glass for what it's worth. Sorry sir."

      "Good man," Jobs replied enthusiastically. "Gentlemen, this guy is promoted. Now go and patent this shit."

    31. Re:Illiterate troll? by pstils · · Score: 1

      Who cares?! It actually doesn't matter what the icons look like, for unprintables sake! It doesn't matter one diddley squat. It doesn't matter what it looks like, either. Apple spent a ton on telling the whole world what looks fashionable, and samsung have pulled the no-brainer and copied it. So What? If the Apple way of doing it made sense, then why change it? If people were used to the Apple way of doing it, don't force them to learn a new way. If every car makers came up with a new way of driving the thing we'd get pretty pissed with the situation. Apple set the trends now, they can't complain when other people follow. If anything it proves the success of their marketing that other companies will follow.

    32. Re:Illiterate troll? by pstils · · Score: 1

      Who cares, though? It's a nice looking pad, and samsung probably copied it. So What?

    33. Re:Illiterate troll? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who cares?! It actually doesn't matter what the icons look like, for unprintables sake!

      Er? Isn't the whole case about what something (for example icons) looks like? Apple is claiming Samsung's look too much like theirs.

    34. Re:Illiterate troll? by Nemyst · · Score: 1

      So basically, as soon as Apple does something, nobody's allowed to do it anymore?

      Maybe if you bothered to look at Samsung's products before the iPad and iPhone, as well as other competitors, you'd be surprised to note Apple hasn't invented the rounded rectangle.

    35. Re:Illiterate troll? by MobileTatsu-NJG · · Score: 1

      If you're going to argue that that particular shape is radically different from dozens of others which came before it or that it's somehow not obvious or simply the next step from designs like the one below then you're an idiot.

      Speaking as someone with a Tab, iPad, and HP Touchpad, I'll come forward and admit I am an idiot. All three tablets are rectangular in shape. They all have rounded corners. They all have a black screen and bezel. In short, if I were to use a just a few words to desribe them, they'd sound identical. If I were to show you all three , side by side, you'd have a much better insight into this case.

      The iPad and the Tab, despite having different dimensions, are similar enough they can be easily confused. I personally actually confused them before on a few occasions. For example I called upstairs and asked one of my coworkers to bring down my iPad the next time he came my way. A half an hour later, he arrived, and I tried to grab it out of his hands. He yanked it back and said "s'not yours!" He was holding his own Tab that he just purchased.

      Meanwhile, I'm sitting here with my freshly delivered HP Touchpad. Uh, no, there's no mistaking this one for the other two. The radius of the bezel is different. It has a round bumper around it. The 'button' looks more like a hole for a speaker . It's obvious that HP came up with their own take on it. Whereas in Samsung's case it looks like they pored every detail of the iPad and mimicked it as closely as possible.

      Having the TouchPad in my hands here really drives that point home. Frankly, all of the tablets I've encountered, except for the Tab, were actually pretty distinct in their own right. If I brought any of those ones I saw at Best Buy in people'd ask me what the 'not-iPad' is I was holding. Frankly, Samsung made a big boo-boo here. Not for legal reasons, but for the simple fact that if people see another 'iPad' floating around, then they're not seeing that Samsung had created a worthy alternative.

      I don't have much of an opinion as to whether or not Apple has or should have a strong legal ground here. I do, however, think Samsung blatantly and foolishly copied their design. Why they'd go out of their way to not make their product distinct and, of all the baffling things, they'd intentionally set out to create ill will with a partner that's making them oodles of money is beyond me.

      So I have two tablets that look like twin brothers, and a third that looks like one of them brougth their girlfriend along. The tablet you linked to looks like some stranger wandered along. I'm an idiot. Okay. Just try to remember that when you simnplify something down to a handful of words, you can make anything seem like anything else. If you really do think anybody is an idiot for it, go take your favorite song, listen to its various remixes, then imagine somebody walked up to you and said "you're an idiot, those songs are identical."

      --

      "I like to lick butts!" by MobileTatsu-NJG (#32700246) (Score:5, Informative)

    36. Re:Illiterate troll? by dogmatixpsych · · Score: 1

      "I don't know about the icons, but most laptops these days are glossy because that's what people tend to buy. This isn't something that started with tablets."

      The parent poster's point was only about the glossiness of the icons, not the LCD screen. There's no issue with that.

    37. Re:Illiterate troll? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      > Those relatively standardized parts are packed pretty tightly into that small, light package

      You missed the part about "lightest and smallest". If you'd compress Wii, Xbox and PS3 to be lightest and smallest, you'd get small boxes upper-limited in size by hard drive and optical media. I doubt you'd get much creativity out of them except for vent grills, edges rounding and paint/finish.

      If you, as someone with "creativity and actual insight", have great ideas about making tablet computer lightest and smallest without making it flat, thin, rounded rectangle, we (and lots of industry professionals) would be glad to hear them out.

    38. Re:Illiterate troll? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here's an analogy that even a closed-minded geek can understand. You have a Wii, XBox 360, and a PS3. Which one of them looks like the other? They all have an optical drive and a bunch of A/V output ports. Could you, at a glance, mistake one for another?

      Those devices aren't trying to pack relatively standardized parts into the lightest and smallest packages they can. They don't have to support a flat display on the front or fit nicely in your hands. I have some ear buds that look a lot like some old ear buds I had from a previous brand. Should those companies sue each other because there's a limited number of practical ways to make a device fit in the ear?

      I don't know why I'm even responding to an obvious Apple fanboy but that post being modded insightful is absurd.

      You say that now, but with the past thirty years of design being a predicate, Apple will change the iPad into something dramatically different in the near future. When that happens, the world's press will claim it's a compromised design that nobody could possibly find useful because too much is left out.

      And then eighteen months down the track when all the copies spew out of the nondesign workshops of the likes of samsung, htc, acer, asus and so on, you'll be up with everyone else still claiming that new revolutionary design was just so obvious that Apple can't be serious about protecting their asses against ripoffs.

      So obvious that, again, nobody actually did it but Apple.

      And you still won't see what you missed about it, and will be railing against thin air.

    39. Re:Illiterate troll? by sethmeisterg · · Score: 1

      Gosh I wish I had some mod points to mod you up.

    40. Re:Illiterate troll? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Round corners is actually also functional design - it's pretty common to hold a tablet by one or two corners (think resting the elbow on your knee), and sharp corners can make this rather inconvenient.

      The reason why you didn't often see those on older tablets (e.g. Windows tablet PCs) is because they were so heavy and so think that you would never try such a thing in the first place. Now that their weight is in 600-700g range (for 10" tablets), it's perfectly reasonable to do so, so shape has to adapt.

    41. Re:Illiterate troll? by addi..ed · · Score: 1

      +5 huh?

      This is a heavily biased rant, full of nonsense and rude assertions about 'the opposition'.
      Is it because of the (laughably flawed) console analogy?

      Weak moderating /. Disappointing

    42. Re:Illiterate troll? by addi..ed · · Score: 1

      You know not of which you speak, fanboi.

      I was originally going to refute that previous silliness line for line, but why bother?
      That Anonymous Coward is obviously not an engineer nor has s/he ever been involved in product development.
      Furthermore, the A/C doesn't fully read (or comprehend) what s/he's responding to nor realize that knee-jerk assertions like "all the companies" or "just about every other" come across as positively infantile.

      And to finish (with a flourish ;) "..Samsung did it to copy iOS" ?
      Based on this level of technical knowledge I'd advice you to bring a friend and maybe a floating device when navigating out unto the internet.

      *
      No insight in previous post - please re-label!

  14. Stop the copying, Samsung by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Samsung merely needs to stop their sick copying of Apple... and license its technology to Apple under FRAND terms.

  15. Copying is okay, to an extent. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OK, I like copying. Copying means you get to stand on the shoulders of giants, or whatever other platitude you might like to sum up progression of ideas.

    Copy the iPad and improve its design? Oh by all means, please; that gives us better products and also drags Apple forwards too. Everybody wins!

    What Samsung has done (and I say this as an ex 2007 iPhone used and current Samsung owner) isn't take what Apple did and make a better version of it, by using the best and adding their own brilliance.

    They just made something that looks the same

  16. Re:A clean uncluttered rectangle wasn't that obvio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If it was obvious then early 1990s tablet PCs would have soon had the same design.

    No it's because the technology clearly wasn't there yet since there were many tablet designs that the ipad appears to have been copied from in scifi movies well before it came along, but you'll ignore that because you want to believe the design was invented by Apple and no-one had ever thought of such a thing before.

    If it wasn't for Apple's iPad and iPhone, Samsung's tablets and phones would look like this and this.

    You mean just like how if Stanley Kubrick hadn't come along Apple's iPad and iPhone would look like the Newton, but of course it's ok for Apple to copy others, but not ok for others to copy Apple.

  17. Re:Not-quite-objective summary by hedwards · · Score: 2

    You do realize that the iPad's shape is hardly unique, I mean for god's sake there's one in 2001 a movie that predate's the iPad by literally decades.

  18. Yay for conflation? by Anubis+IV · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Trademarks are not patents. Patents are not trademarks. You'll have a hard time getting a patent on a rectangle, but getting a trademark on an iconic design that just happens to be rectangular? Sure. Trademarks are there to protect the look and feel of products from copies, knock-offs, and imitations, and to ensure that consumers don't confuse products they see with one another. People, including the summary, keep referring to this as strictly a patent battle, but trademarks are playing a large role as well, and the "rectangle" complaint the submitter made is referencing trademarks, not patents.

    Speaking personally, I'm a dyed-in-wool Apple fanboy, but even I didn't think too highly of Apple's recent complaints and lawsuits. That is, I didn't until I went into a Best Buy a few months back, walked up to what I thought was an iPad display next to the Apple section of the store, activated the device, and discovered it was a Galaxy Tab. If I got them confused both at a distance and up close, what hope does a typical consumer have? Trademarks are designed to prevent that sort of confusion, and I honestly think it's justified here.

    1. Re:Yay for conflation? by Chuck+Chunder · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That is, I didn't until I went into a Best Buy a few months back, walked up to what I thought was an iPad display next to the Apple section of the store, activated the device, and discovered it was a Galaxy Tab.

      Isn't that, in large part, because Apple's design avoids having anything that particularly distinguishes it as Apple? IE there is no Apple logo on the front. It seems to me that Apple is trying to claim what is essentially a lack of trade dress as trade dress, thereby gaining protection over something essentially generic rather than something specific.

      I think it is a worrying technique because the trademark stops being a useful tool for the customer (ie letting them know a certain company stands behind a particular product) and starts being a weapon against other companies implementing fairly basic designs.

      --
      Boffoonery - downloadable Comedy Benefit for Bletchley Park
    2. Re:Yay for conflation? by PaladinAlpha · · Score: 1

      Missed the shining silver "SAMSUNG" on it, did you?

    3. Re:Yay for conflation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hm. That's fine and dandy, but Apple didn't sue over trademark issues: it was explicitly over _design patents_.

      And... seriously... you think anyone is going to buy a Samsung Galaxy Pad inadvertedly, thinking it's an Apple iPad? Here's a hint: before buying something, read the box. I'm pretty sure Samsung still hasn't got "iPad" plastered on their packaging boxes (when that happens, I'll agree that Apple has a strong trademark case against Samsung).

      In the end, all this litigation just shows how slim Apple's advantage in the market is. If people realize that Samsung (and others) can sell something functionally and aesthetically equivalent to an iPhone at half the price, Apple should start to get worried

    4. Re:Yay for conflation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Isn't that, in large part, because Apple's design avoids having anything that particularly distinguishes it as Apple? IE there is no Apple logo on the front. It seems to me that Apple is trying to claim what is essentially a lack of trade dress as trade dress, thereby gaining protection over something essentially generic rather than something specific.

      Look at the Sony S1 Tablet. It's pretty minimal but it has a unique, attractive design that is clearly set apart from iPad.

      The reason Apple is going after Samsung is because, when taken in combination, their packaging, UI design and hardware design overlaps significantly with iPad. Look at the way the Samsung Tab comes out of the box, you open the box and are presented with the product and only the product, flush with the edges of the box. This is clearly something inspired by Apple packaging. Taken by itself – not a big deal – it's only packaging. But in combination with the rest it doesn't sit well.

      Other manufacturers such as HTC, Motorola, Sony, have had bits and pieces of their products inspired by Apple (and Apple by them, such as the new notification center in iOS clearly taking from Android). But the whole product produced by these companies is still unique with its own stylings.

    5. Re:Yay for conflation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Missed the shining silver "SAMSUNG" on it, did you?

      It's on the back.

      Just like the Apple logo on Apple devices. Doesn't sound like much, it's only logo placement after all. But when taken into consideration with packaging design, hardware design, cable design and UI design, Samsung certainly looks to be creating products that mimic successful Apple products.

    6. Re:Yay for conflation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah there's nothing that distinguishes it as Apple apart from the entire UI design and look-and-feel. Did your even read parent? You're saying that's all invalid because they don't have an Apple logo on the front fascia? Riiiiight.

    7. Re:Yay for conflation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amazing you managed to find the button to activate it, still not knowing it was a Galaxy tab. Did the lack of presence of a round home/activation button on the front not put you off first? It took me a good few seconds to figure out how to activate the Galaxy first time.

    8. Re:Yay for conflation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So by having a simple, tight design, with as little visible features possible, the ones remaining are round rectangle of a sort, a device color, a tapered design, a metallic rim, it automatically mean everyone can copy your effort to remove all that and make it ridiculously simple?

      Remember in the old times, when naysayers told everyone a phone without a keyboard was a stupid idea ... nah ... a RIDICULOUS idea, that no one would ever buy one, and it would put your peanut-butter smears on the devices, so no one will ever buy one? I do remember that time.

      Remember the flips, remember the P900 with its optional keyboard, remember the slide keyboards, remember the blackberry? No one would ever mistake these with an iPhone.

      But somehow, because another company makes a not-so-cheap knockoff that looks the same, feels the same, has a relatively similar UI, and it goes even up to the boxing elements being similarly packaged? Not that Google ever helped, anyways ... http://random.andrewwarner.com/what-googles-android-looked-like-before-and-after-the-launch-of-iphone/ But I wouldn't be able to tell that to an Android fanboy.

      Make a full screen phone that splits in the middle with a material that'd make a seamless transition, losing a mere few pixels in the middle. Make one with other features attenuating some problems with having so little buttons. Add a screen on the back of the device. Create a way to add up a small keyboard. If Apple didn't do it first, add Siri, and actually create a phone that doesn't have anything showing for it.

      That's innovation.

      Taking the full deal and making sure it changes just enough so you won't get sued is a copycat me-too without imagination company who wants a piece of the pie without working too hard. Just like Warner Brothers started doing Loonies Tunes by copycatting Mickey Mouse, and making it a cat instead, it was designed by lawyers who told artists what to change to make it just different enough.

        And you know what, with Siri's success, I'm nearly positive there will be an iPhone Shuffle all voice controlled in our near future.

    9. Re:Yay for conflation? by JAlexoi · · Score: 1
      Yet when I come into an electronics store, I take a glance ant the tablets stall I can distinguish only the 7" from the 10-ish inch tablets. And yes, that includes iPad1, iPad2, Sony S1, XOOM, ASUS Transformer, Iconia and other tablets.

      Other manufacturers such as HTC, Motorola, Sony, have had bits and pieces of their products inspired by Apple (and Apple by them, such as the new notification center in iOS clearly taking from Android). But the whole product produced by these companies is still unique with its own stylings.

      About Moto... Remember German lawsuit against Galaxy Tab 10.1? There is a lawsuit on the same grounds against the XOOM. So, please.... Apple's actions speak more than your statements. Apple clearly believes that they own the right to produce tablet design mobile computers. That makes them assholes of the highest degree.

    10. Re:Yay for conflation? by Theaetetus · · Score: 1

      Trademarks are not patents. Patents are not trademarks. You'll have a hard time getting a patent on a rectangle, but getting a trademark on an iconic design that just happens to be rectangular? Sure. Trademarks are there to protect the look and feel of products from copies, knock-offs, and imitations, and to ensure that consumers don't confuse products they see with one another. People, including the summary, keep referring to this as strictly a patent battle, but trademarks are playing a large role as well, and the "rectangle" complaint the submitter made is referencing trademarks, not patents.

      Actually, it's referencing a design patent. And design patents are very similar to trademarks. The test for infringement is almost identical, too.

      But you're right, this isn't really a patent fight, at least not in how we think of it. Apple's design patent is really protecting the trade dress of the iPad, which Samsung appears to have copied. The issue with Samsung's patents is not validity or infringement, but whether they're essential to the 3G standard and, accordingly, is Samsung acting unfairly monopolistic by asserting them against licensees. That's more contract and antitrust law than patent law.

    11. Re:Yay for conflation? by Theaetetus · · Score: 1

      That is, I didn't until I went into a Best Buy a few months back, walked up to what I thought was an iPad display next to the Apple section of the store, activated the device, and discovered it was a Galaxy Tab.

      Isn't that, in large part, because Apple's design avoids having anything that particularly distinguishes it as Apple? IE there is no Apple logo on the front. It seems to me that Apple is trying to claim what is essentially a lack of trade dress as trade dress, thereby gaining protection over something essentially generic rather than something specific.

      You can identify a Coke bottle just by the silhouette - you don't need a logo. Same thing with a Jeep, or a Wii console, or a Microsoft StarTac, etc. NBC has a valid trade mark on a 1-6-4 note protection, and Intel has one on a 1-4-1-5. No logos are even involved. Other than the Galaxy, you can identify an iPad as being an Apple iPad at a glance, without needing a logo.

    12. Re:Yay for conflation? by Solandri · · Score: 2

      The other worrying thing is that with Apple winning injunctions based on generic design patents, while Samsung loses them based on its patents being licensed under FRAND, in the future companies are going to be much less willing to license any patent under FRAND. They're going to want to save the real, beefy tech patents to protect them against "your widget is a circle" type patents.

      It will be much harder to set standards, much less get companies to follow them. Products will be less compatible, leading to greater vendor lock-in. Smaller companies which used to pay the same licensing fee for FRAND patents as big companies, will suddenly find themselves paying much higher rates as they don't have the clout to negotiate as good a deal as a megacorp. Competition will decrease, and the rate of technological progress will slow down. This is a very worrying path we're heading down due to the courts (even if not deliberately) prioritizing form over function.

      And for people bringing up the Coke bottle as an example of a design patent, the defining characteristic of a design patent in the U.S. is that it is ornamental. That is, the characteristic form being patented serves no functional purpose. The big Apple logo which lights up on the lid of a Macbook is a good example of something which qualifies for a design patent. So is (unnecessary) glass on the back side of a phone. A tablet has to be flat and rectangular due to its screen, and it needs to have rounded corners and edges to be comfortable and safe to hold and carry. These are all functional purposes, and do not (should not) qualify for a design patent.

    13. Re:Yay for conflation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      samsung DID copy apple, and apple DID copy samsung. period.

    14. Re:Yay for conflation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it is because Samsung blatantly copied Apple's design *after* Apple released their products, presumably to confuse customers is the demonstrated manner. See http://peanutbuttereggdirt.com/e/custom/Apple-vs-Samsung-1-Hardware-Design.html. And that is exactly what the law is there to prevent.

    15. Re:Yay for conflation? by Chuck+Chunder · · Score: 1

      You can identify a Coke bottle just by the silhouette - you don't need a logo. Same thing with a Jeep, or a Wii console, or a Microsoft StarTac, etc. NBC has a valid trade mark on a 1-6-4 note protection, and Intel has one on a 1-4-1-5. No logos are even involved. Other than the Galaxy, you can identify an iPad as being an Apple iPad at a glance, without needing a logo.

      All of those things (though I'm not familliar with the StarTac) have distinguishing features unrelated to function. I didn't claim that distinctive design isn't possible, merely that the iPad doesn't have distinctive features. Much like flat panel televisions have largely converged on a pretty similar and minimal look based on function I think the iPad design is merely an example of this.

      Don't get me wrong, I appreciate Apple design principles (I have an iPhone, iPad and iMac). I like that form follows function. I just don't think that others should be prevented from adopting similar principles.

      --
      Boffoonery - downloadable Comedy Benefit for Bletchley Park
    16. Re:Yay for conflation? by Theaetetus · · Score: 1

      You can identify a Coke bottle just by the silhouette - you don't need a logo. Same thing with a Jeep, or a Wii console, or a Microsoft StarTac, etc. NBC has a valid trade mark on a 1-6-4 note protection, and Intel has one on a 1-4-1-5. No logos are even involved. Other than the Galaxy, you can identify an iPad as being an Apple iPad at a glance, without needing a logo.

      All of those things (though I'm not familliar with the StarTac) have distinguishing features unrelated to function. I didn't claim that distinctive design isn't possible, merely that the iPad doesn't have distinctive features. Much like flat panel televisions have largely converged on a pretty similar and minimal look based on function I think the iPad design is merely an example of this.

      But the distinction is between "pretty similar" and "exactly similar". Consider the HTC Droid - flat, rectangular touch screen smartphone... quite different from an iPhone, though. Profile's very distinct.
      Similarly, a quick GIS for "flat panel television" turns up hundreds of similar, but not identical flat panel TVs.

      The question here is whether the Samsung Galaxy is "similar" and okay, or "identical" and not okay.

    17. Re:Yay for conflation? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 2

      You mistakenly assume that Apple is only talking about trademarks and design patents here. This is plainly not the case - it started that way in Germany, but by now they're bringing out such innovative patents as "Unlocking a device by performing gestures on an unlock image" or "Portable electronic device for photo management" to block sales of Samsung products in Netherlands and Australia.

    18. Re:Yay for conflation? by Anubis+IV · · Score: 1

      The lack of the home button did put me off, but for some reason it didn't click until the screen turned on that what I was using was not an iPad. In retrospect it was silly of me to have not paid more attention to it, but that sort of confusion can happen, and that's the point I was trying to make.

    19. Re:Yay for conflation? by Anubis+IV · · Score: 1

      I don't see where I make any assumption of that sort, nor do I see the pertinence. I merely pointed out that people are conflating patents and trademarks. The nature of the patents and whether or not they are fighting over "innovative patents" is immaterial to the point I was making.

  19. Re:A clean uncluttered rectangle wasn't that obvio by Fascist · · Score: 1

    Well said

  20. Tit or tat didn't happen by erroneus · · Score: 1

    Sorry, just had to be said. My brain is tired.

  21. Re:Not-quite-objective summary by Sarten-X · · Score: 3, Informative
    --
    You do not have a moral or legal right to do absolutely anything you want.
  22. "MS just used shrewd business practices" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And Apple's business practices aren't shrewd? Go away, fanboi.

  23. Re:A clean uncluttered rectangle wasn't that obvio by Sarten-X · · Score: 1

    The PADDs had larger bezels and buttons on the front. The iPad trademark (and the infringing Samsung products) do not.

    --
    You do not have a moral or legal right to do absolutely anything you want.
  24. Re:A clean uncluttered rectangle wasn't that obvio by Anthony+Mouse · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Archos 9, the year before the first iPad.

    If you want I can remake that web page you linked and put it where the iPad is and put the iPad at the bottom. Or are you finished trolling?

  25. Re:Not-quite-objective summary by MrDoh! · · Score: 1

    Go to Hulu, look up John Doe, episode The Rising, 20 seconds in. Play it for 20 seconds and note all those iPads.
    In 2003.

    --
    Waiting for an amusing sig.
  26. I predict Samsung will lose... by SeaFox · · Score: 1

    simply because the iPhone is such a loved device the court wont want to halt its sale for fear of angry mobs.

    1. Re:I predict Samsung will lose... by andydread · · Score: 1

      and you hit the nail dead on.

  27. Re:Not-quite-objective summary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    (unlike the patent-a-rectangle nature of the opposition)

    Ah, Slashdot... as professional as ever!

    Apple's patent doesn't cover just a "rectangle". Apple has design patents and trademarks covering the overall look of the device, including the rounded corners, glossy panel, and size of the bezel. As a trademark, people should be able to look at an iPad and say "Oh, that's an iPad!" without seeing the logo. Upon a cursory review, Samsung's product looks very similar to an iPad, to the point of diminishing the uniqueness of the trademarked design. Samsung certainly appears to be aiming to cash in on the elitist market by offering a similar-looking product at a lower price. It's the computer equivalent of a Canal Street counterfeit Rolex watch. A non-infringing product would be one with a screen extending all the way to the edge of the device, or one with more decoration on the front, or any of myriad other alterations to the basic "rectangle" pattern.

    Samsung's patents are technical in nature because they're for technology, not design.

    While I do think Samsung's tablet does look a lot like an iPad, the majority of the features included in the actual design patent are really generic.
    A glossy screen?

    So, pretty much any modern phone/tablet screen fits that definition.

    The size of the bezel?

    Everyone pretty much wants to use the same size bezel because of the cost of screens and the size of the human hand when holding it. It's like trying to patent the basic dimensions of a hammer. Obviously, if you are going to make a hammer, and you alter the relative dimensions a lot, you just end up with a less functional hammer, not a less distinctive one.

    In terms of designing it so that everyone who sees it should recognize it... Well, if you look at the pictures in the actual design patent they are using in that case, you will not recognize it as an iPad at all. It looks nothing like an iPad. It doesn't even have the single button on the bottom. The only thing that vaguely distinguishes it is that it is a rounded rectangle.

    The design of an iPad is pretty generic looking anyway. It isn't like an iMac, that has a really distinctive design. When I glance at a tablet, the only thing that let's me guess it might be an iPad is the icon on the button at the bottom of it. But, they didn't bother to patent that.

     

  28. Re:Not-quite-objective summary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    You mean the one with an asymmetric bezel, 10 buttons, and a completely different profile?

    Yes, exactly, we all know it's ok for Apple because they had 9 less buttons on the bottom whereas Samsung does not so, by the law of button count infringement, that means Apple doesn't infringe on the 2001 device but Samsung infringes on Apple's device.

    Apple has a symmetric bezel as opposed to an asymmetric bezel and because of the well-known bezel symmetry vs beveled edge inequality it means that technically Apple's bezel is different to that of the device show in 2001 but the beveled edges (show here) are exactly identical.

    And lastly with the profile, we come to another law of inequality regarding profile and aspect ratio, profiles differ but 4:3 is exactly equal to 16:9 and thus the latter does not constitute a difference.

    Also sorry Samsung but the fact that your corner radius is different won't save you either, we can come up with a way to oppose that one if you choose to use it as a defense so don't bother.

  29. Blah blah blah by jtownatpunk.net · · Score: 1

    This had better not delay my retina iPad with LTE.

  30. Re:Not-quite-objective summary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Samsung: Make your tablet distinct. Add some trim pieces like Acer/Asus/Toshiba/Sony did, or add a nice little stripe around the bezel or something. Hell, do the popular thing and make the frame customizable and sell various colored and patterned bezels! (Pink is a popular color amongst the fairer sex, hint hint. Pink gadgets SELL)

    You mean trim pieces like the blatantly obvious "Samsung" trademark logo emblazoned on the screen side of the device? ... or did I miss some sarcasm?

  31. TRADEMARKS AREN'T PATENTS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thank you America, and your corrupt politicians and incompetent bureaucrats for destroying the distinction between a TRADEMARK and a PATENT.

    Many of Apple's 'patents' are simply trademarks... 'Oh, it looks like an iPad' DOES NOT MEAN A VALID PATENT HAS BEEN INFRINGED.

    Look and feel, before american corruption, were trademarks. There are enforcement mechanisms for trademarks, but the proof is inconvenient (ie no court is ever likely to find that a reasonable consumer would buy the Samsung product, thinking it was actually an apple...")

    Do you see patent fights over the rectangleness of TVs? Last I looked every new LCD TV is nearly identical.

    Apple shouldn't have been granted these patents in the first place....

  32. sale jersey by jersey123456 · · Score: 0

    Some admirers adopt the ‘real deal’,wholesale Women nfl jerseys, bogus analogously to those beat by the players,Bruins Jerseys, while others adopt replica mlb jerseys,Jets jerseys, which are still of top superior but are priced at a lower level.MLB Jerseys for women and MLB accoutrement for kids are two of the fastest growing segments of the jerseys market.Goods delivery,wholesale Texas Rangers jerseys, top superior NHL jerseys and broad amount are guaranteed.MLB accoutrement is colorful,Women nfl jerseys, adequate and fabricated for just about any age fan from toddlers to guy’s with a lineman’s physique.Welcome to NBA jerseys baddest and buy broad mlb jerseys on Jerseyshop.The website sorts through the assorted options admirers have.Wholesale mlb jerseys,Giants jerseys, fabricated accessible through a array of acclaimed sellers who accept partnered with the company.During the boxy bread-and-butter times,wholesale NHL Chicago Blackhawks Jerseys, MLB jerseys mlb admirers aswell wish Wholesale NFL jerseys bargain mlb jerseys.

    1. Re:sale jersey by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you sell uggboots too?

  33. Re:A clean uncluttered rectangle wasn't that obvio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    but you'll ignore that because you want to believe the design was invented by Apple and no-one had ever thought of such a thing before.

    Here's the thing.

    The technology was there when Apple did it. Apple did do it.

    Other manufacturers didn't do it when Apple did it, when the technology was clearly there.

    AFTER Apple did it, everybody did it.

    As usual.

    This is like the un-knowledgeable git perusing an art museum and looking at a piece they don't understand with a $100k sticker and SOLD written next to it, and turning up their nose going "I could have done that"

    but you didn't

    That's what you don't get.

  34. Re:Not-quite-objective summary by Sarten-X · · Score: 1

    Yes, exactly, we all know it's ok for Apple because they had 9 less buttons on the bottom whereas Samsung does not so, by the law of button count infringement, that means Apple doesn't infringe on the 2001 device but Samsung infringes on Apple's device.

    The many buttons (or lack thereof) are an immediately-evident detail that shows we're not looking at a genuine iPad in 2001. When I searched on Google (for "2001 ipad" I think) to eventually find that page, I noticed small dots at the bottom of the 2001 tablet. That difference was evident in a thumbnail of a scene shot from a perspective of being 3 meters high overhead. That's a very obvious detail, and it contributes greatly to having an overall different appearance.

    Apple has a symmetric bezel as opposed to an asymmetric bezel and because of the well-known bezel symmetry vs beveled edge inequality

    The bezel is the frame around the screen. On the 2001 device, there's a thin bezel going around three sides of the screen, and a large bezel at the bottom to hold the buttons. The iPad has a roughly half-inch bezel around all four sides. The Galaxy Tab has a roughly half-inch bezel around all four sides.

    it means that technically Apple's bezel is different to that of the device show[n] in 2001

    Yes, exactly. Apple's bezel is different, because it's not the same.

    but the beveled edges (show[n] here) are exactly identical.

    Not exactly identical, but that's not really an issue. The bevel (meaning the smoothing of the edge, which is unrelated to the bezel being the frame around the screen) is a subtle enough detail that even a major change (like having no bevel at all) wouldn't do much to distinguish a Galaxy Tab from an iPad. At a glance, they look the same. Also note that the bevel can only really be seen in profile...

    And lastly with the profile, we come to another law of inequality regarding profile and aspect ratio, profiles differ but 4:3 is exactly equal to 16:9 and thus the latter does not constitute a difference.

    That's not what profile means. It means "outline as seen from the side", and again the 2001 design is significantly different from the iPad. Not only do the buttons appear to be raised from the surface, but the bezel with the buttons looks slanted upwards at the bottom. When viewed from the side, the 2001 tablet would have a distinctly different appearance from the iPad. The Galaxy Tab appears to be the same thickness as the iPad, with the same perfectly-flat design.

    Also sorry Samsung but the fact that your corner radius is different won't save you either, we can come up with a way to oppose that one if you choose to use it as a defense so don't bother.

    That's another ridiculously subtle difference that would only be apparent in a side-by-side comparison.

    All together, there are enough similarities in the design and few enough differences that from a distance, it's unreasonable to expect people to see the difference between an iPad and a Galaxy Tab. Conversely, there are enough differences that an iPad is clearly not copying any design from 2001. No, this is not an absolute definition, and there are no fixed rules on what makes something different enough to not infringe on a trademark.

    For a simple test of whether something is likely to infringe on another product's design, try this test: Write down a verbose description of the design, using as few actual measurements as possible. For the iPad, this would be something like "A rectangular platform with a glossy front surface. The front has a touch screen surrounded by a bezel roughly half an inch wide. There is a single concave button on a short side of the bezel with a picture of a ho

    --
    You do not have a moral or legal right to do absolutely anything you want.
  35. Re:Not-quite-objective summary by Sarten-X · · Score: 0

    That's the closest to prior art yet, but still not quite there. I don't see any iPads. I see small computers that are about an inch thick, with a stylus interface. It's clearly not an iPad, even from the brief shots we can see. If I were walking down the street and passed someone using one, I wouldn't think it was an iPad. The differences are obvious.

    --
    You do not have a moral or legal right to do absolutely anything you want.
  36. poor analysis by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately, I expect that Samsung will fail partly because of overseas precedent, but mostly because their patents are sane, technical and narrow in scope (unlike the patent-a-rectangle nature of the opposition).

    I know it's bad form to make fun of the Slashdot editors, but is this the best analysis they could find? Samsung will lose because their patents are sane, but Apple's are insane? The lack of legal understanding in that post is disheartening........Really, good patents are better, although underestanding what a 'good' patent is might take a little bit of research....

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    1. Re:poor analysis by RazorSharp · · Score: 1

      I don't know what you're talking about. This has to be the most objective summary I've ever read.

      --
      "From the depths of my skeptical and rationalist soul, I ask the Lord to protect me from California touchie-feeliedom."
    2. Re:poor analysis by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Being insane doesn't make a patent more likely to win. Thinking so merely shows your lack of understanding of the patent system.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    3. Re:poor analysis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're judging good patents vs bad patents in terms of how successful they are in court. The rest is redundant.

      If you were to judge good patents vs bad patents in terms of how likely they are to have technical merit, then you would see the point of the /. editor.

      Just because a patent is successfully upheld in courts does not make it sane, it makes it plausible to a judge with probably very little technical training.

  37. Re:A clean uncluttered rectangle wasn't that obvio by PaladinAlpha · · Score: 1

    Yeah, just like the brilliant design students who decided to make computers smaller than a battleship, right? I mean, it seems obvious now that desktop computers should be smaller, thinner, and lighter, but we never would have guessed if it weren't for the first people who happened to do it after it was technically feasible. Pardon me while I roll my eyes.

  38. Re:A clean uncluttered rectangle wasn't that obvio by Omestes · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If it wasn't for Apple's iPad and iPhone, Samsung's tablets and phones would look like this [askdavetaylor.com] and this [mobilegazette.com].

    Either that or... form follows function. Capacitive screens and more robust OSs have killed the need for buttons. This limits the design space available. A modern tablet (with or without Apple) would eventually have turned into a nothing but a face and a screen. All of those buttons on your cherry-picked photos are completely superfluous thanks to better technology (which Apple didn't invent). The only choice is the size of the screen, the color of the flat space around it, and whether to round your corners or not. Black is a normal color for these things, as well. Go to your local electronics store and see what the popular color for all gadgets currently is... You'll be shocked to learn that its black. Further... icons in a grid... really? I've have icons in a grid long before anyone even thought of smart phones. I've have hand-held devices (back when they were called PDAs) with icons in a grid. Actually a grid is the most sensible way of arranging small squares... Go figure.

    I don't have a horse in this race. Both Apple and Samsung are behaving badly. But at least Samsung actually is using patents that DO something, which isn't nearly as dangerous as the shit Apple is pulling.

    This is true, since there existed flat objects with rounded corners, and a centered touch sensitive screen before the iPad, or iPhone.

    Unless the argument is that Samsung should have been forced to stick superfluous buttons on their modern devices, since obviously Apple is special.

    Further, icons in a grid

    --
    A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey
  39. Re:A clean uncluttered rectangle wasn't that obvio by PaladinAlpha · · Score: 2

    I like that trick of having all the "pre" iPad stuff oriented one way, then having the iPad and everything following oriented another, in the hope that people don't notice that most tablets don't use the iPad aspect ratio. Any time people resort to trickery, it means they know their main point is questionable.

    Also, tying into a comment I made above: what if you had all vehicles "pre" Model T and "post" Model T? How do you think that would look? Why do you think that is?

    I didn't used to disdain Apple products until I started noticing that exposure to them really does seem to erode critical thinking skills.

  40. Re:A clean uncluttered rectangle wasn't that obvio by scsirob · · Score: 2

    What on earth is the value of a smaller or larger bezel? When is it no longer an infringement? When it is 1mm wider? 3mm? 60cm? Fact of the matter is that a square without buttons is not unique nor new. My Navigon GPS has no buttons, it's square, has a touch screen and existed before the iPad. It can run multiple programs (picture viewer, handsfree kit and moving map navigation).

    Claiming rights on a rectangle is stupid.

    --
    To Terminate, or not to Terminate, that's the question - SCSIROB
  41. Re:Not-quite-objective summary by PaladinAlpha · · Score: 1

    It says "Samsung" on the front of it. Your turn.

  42. Re:A clean uncluttered rectangle wasn't that obvio by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    Fact of the matter is that a square without buttons is not unique nor new. My Navigon GPS has no buttons, it's square, has a touch screen and existed before the iPad.

    Just like paper maps ;-)

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  43. Yippee! An Aussie story on Slashdot! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's been nearly half an hour since the last one. I was experiencing withdrawal symptoms!

    1. Re:Yippee! An Aussie story on Slashdot! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Toy me kengeroo dern, spurt,
      Toy me kengeroooooo derrrn!"

      Australians have such lovely accents. When you speak, it's like fingers down a blackboard. Australian chicks can etch glass with their voices. They sound like a hyena that has got its nuts caught on electrified barbwire.

  44. I dont think i help the arguement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    But I bought my Galaxy S almost entirely because the interface matched my 3g iPhone I was replacing due to an aged battery.

    In my mind the Galaxy S was an iPhone with replacable battery, more CPU, expandable memory and the ability to install apps other than just through a store without needing to jailbreak.

    1. Re:I dont think i help the arguement by pstils · · Score: 1

      ...and I think that's a good thing. You've learnt a particular way of interacting with the device, and Samsung are providing you with a familiar interface with a better hardware/software solution. I would not want the world to be any other way.

  45. Re:A clean uncluttered rectangle wasn't that obvio by Joce640k · · Score: 1

    And what you don't get is that "form follows function". All tablet designers were headed in that direction:

    eg.

    http://www.blogcdn.com/www.engadget.com/media/2006/03/samsungpictureframe.jpg

    https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/File:Tablet.jpg

    --
    No sig today...
  46. Re:Not-quite-objective summary by jkflying · · Score: 1

    And lastly with the profile, we come to another law of inequality regarding profile and aspect ratio, profiles differ but 4:3 is exactly equal to 16:9 and thus the latter does not constitute a difference.

    Please, please, please check your math.

    4:3 --> 1.33333:1
    16:9 --> 1.7777:1

    And the whole thing about patents is that if there is prior art, they are invalid. It doesn't matter if Samsung produces an identical copy, if there is any example of symmetrically bevelled edges anywhere before, it is invalid as a patent. If there is an example of anything with an equal corner radius, that one is also invalid. You can't patent a new combination of old things. Or at least *technically* you can't. If you know somebody in the patent office OTOH....

    --
    Help I am stuck in a signature factory!
  47. Re:A clean uncluttered rectangle wasn't that obvio by Joce640k · · Score: 1

    The best part is: The iPad does still have one button on it but it's not shown in the registered design...

    http://www.scribd.com/doc/61944044/Community-Design-000181607-0001

    --
    No sig today...
  48. Re:Not-quite-objective summary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The many buttons (or lack thereof) are an immediately-evident detail that shows we're not looking at a genuine iPad in 2001.

    Really? Holy crap i actually thought that despite the aesthetic differences that was a real ipad in that movie and they just took decades to release it.

    The bezel is the frame around the screen. On the 2001 device, there's a thin bezel going around three sides of the screen, and a large bezel at the bottom to hold the buttons. The iPad has a roughly half-inch bezel around all four sides. The Galaxy Tab has a roughly half-inch bezel around all four sides.

    So we see a difference between the ipad and the 2001 device, which we accept differentiates them. We also have the beveled edge which differs significantly between the ipad and the galaxy, yet only you fail to accept that as a difference.

    Yes, exactly. Apple's bezel is different, because it's not the same.

    I see that was lost on you.

    Not exactly identical, but that's not really an issue. The bevel (meaning the smoothing of the edge, which is unrelated to the bezel being the frame around the screen) is a subtle enough detail that even a major change (like having no bevel at all) wouldn't do much to distinguish a Galaxy Tab from an iPad.

    Even a blind man would find that to be a significant difference, your metrics have no basis or validity.

    That's not what profile means.

    I know you're not getting this, but you could at least try, as you can see - or rather you can't - i wasn't saying profile is aspect ratio, i was saying there is a very obvious difference in profile between the 2001 device and the ipad just as there is a very obvious difference between the aspect ratio of the ipad and galaxy.

    For the iPad, this would be something like "A rectangular platform with a glossy front surface. The front has a touch screen surrounded by a bezel roughly half an inch wide. There is a single concave button on a short side of the bezel with a picture of a house on it.

    Oh! It all makes sense now, you clearly haven't even looked at an ipad, it's a square on the button, not a fucking house you blind idiot, this pretty much explains why your position is so moronic.


    The point is there are a number of clear aesthetic differences and similarities between the ipad and the 2001 device (and many other pre-ipad devices like the archos) just as there are between the ipad and galaxy, but you seem to only be able to point out the similarities between the devices, not the differences. Which obviously just shows you as being blind - which is quite probable since you think the square on the ipad home button is a house - or biased. Why not try and view it objectively? I'm not saying who is right or wrong, im just pointing out both the differences and similarities, you don't seem capable of doing that and are only able to discern the similarities (though given your impression of the home button you're probably not even looking at the right device).

  49. On Xerox, Apple and Progress by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  50. Re:Illiterate troll? Yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >Have you ever seen any interviews with their design and UX teams? No. That's because they don't exist.

    Everything would have been much clearer if Braun A.G. (Gillette now if my memory is correct) or its designer Dieter Rams attacked Apple long ago on stealing its industrial design basics. Then we either had this Bauhaus derivative declared open source or everyone could get a license of Braun or Rams to make similar designs. One way or another that door at the back has been locked by Apple, Gillette or by Rams. Samsung could make Dieter Rams a rich man and give Apple a hard time in court if they hired him to give his blessings on the Samsung designs.

  51. Re:A clean uncluttered rectangle wasn't that obvio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Except Samsung had unobvious uncluttered rectangle tablet year before iPad. Because it's so damn unobvious that other input means aren't neccessary when you've got touchscreen.

  52. Chances of success by Zugok · · Score: 1

    It remains to be seen whether Samsung has any better luck with the retaliatory strike in Australian [snip] courts than it did with courts in the Netherlands.

    I don't know, will adversarial courts get it wrong like inquistorial courts did? :P

    --
    "I just can't sit while people are saying nonsense in a meeting without saying it's nonsense" J Watson, Sci Am 288:(4)51
  53. Re:Not-quite-objective summary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please, please, please check your math.

    4:3 --> 1.33333:1 16:9 --> 1.7777:1

    Please, please, please think next time, a big whoosh for you.
    another law of inequality regarding profile and aspect ratio
    Obviously the OP was happy to differentiate the ipad and 2001 device based on profile, yet ignored the just-as-obvious fact that the aspect ratios between the ipad and galaxy are different, it appears he can't tell the difference between aspect ratios but he can tell the difference between profiles...odd. For some reason he only sees similarities between the ipad and galaxy and only differences between the ipad and 2001 device, not very objective.

  54. How Many Times by whisper_jeff · · Score: 1

    http://www.appleinsider.com/articles/11/10/18/samsung_accused_of_lifting_iphone_screenshot_for_galaxy_player_promo.html

    How many times does Samsung need to copy Apple outright before people finally recognize that yes, they are, in fact, copying Apple at every turn. Yes, I know it's easy to blow off this story or the icons or the shape or that individual story and that other individual story but, for most people, when viewing all of these examples as a whole, the picture becomes very clear - Samsung copies Apple every chance they get. Time and time and time and time again, Samsung is copying Apple.

    When are people going to realize this?

    You don't have to like Apple to acknowledge the truth when it's obvious. Feel free to hate Apple all you want, as seems so en vogue on /. lately, but you demonstrate a disconnect from reality when you stick your head in the sand and ignore the simple fact that Samsung really is copying Apple. Often. In many ways.

    I would think that the /. crowd would be opposed to that, regardless of who is doing it and to whom it is being done...

    Yeah. I know. I must be new here/I'm an Apple fanboy (take your pick).

    1. Re:How Many Times by andydread · · Score: 1

      How many times should Apple copy others designs before before people finally recognize that yes, Apple are, in fact, copying other people's concepts.

    2. Re:How Many Times by AdrianKemp · · Score: 1

      You should look at release dates for those devices. The only two that look similar to the iPad came out months after.

      But... you know... troll on.

    3. Re:How Many Times by andydread · · Score: 1

      All those devices were introduced and made public before the ipad was released. Maybe you are the troll moron here. And even so you believe that it only takes months to develop and produce a tablet? So all those devices are copies of Ipad too right? So what you are implying is that those devices came out months after ipad so they must have either started development on those devices once they saw the ipad or they were developed in parallel? what are you saying.

    4. Re:How Many Times by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >they are, in fact, copying Apple at every turn

      When, exactly, did they lock down the Tab and restrict it to running only apps approved by Samsung and purchased through samTunez: the Samsung AppStore?

      THAT is the central, defining trait of everything Apple. Apple enslaves you, locks you down, limits & restricts what you're allowed to do, and does everything it can to forcibly turn you into a passive content consumer. Apple says "No.", while Android says, "what3ver, go RTFM and have fun!"

    5. Re:How Many Times by AdrianKemp · · Score: 1

      What I'm implying, is that you're trolling and (now clearly) an idiot.

      If those tablets came out AFTER the iPad, then they were almost certainly started AFTER the iPad. So regardless, they come AFTER the iPad in your little graphic.

      No matter how you slice it, you're a retard.

    6. Re:How Many Times by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uhm, you are the idiot. The CrunchPad was started in July 2008, with the first prototype coming a month later. That's 2 years BEFORE the iPad, genius.
      The HP Slate came out January of 2010, the iPad in April.
      The TC1100 was DISCONTINUED in 2005.
      The description of the HP Slate would certainly include a "configuration of a rectangular handheld mobile digital electronic device with rounded corners. The color black appears on the front of the device and on the curved corners of the device. The color silver appears as the outer border."

      Oops, that's Apple's claimed 'trademark'. Sorry.

  55. At least there's no bias in the summary... by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

    "Unfortunately, I expect that Samsung will fail partly because of overseas precedent, but mostly because their patents are sane, technical and narrow in scope (unlike the patent-a-rectangle nature of the opposition)."

    Not even trying to hide the shilling now, eh? Clearly, Samsung trying to pull a Rambus on the worldwide 3G standards is sooooo much better than Apple's ridiculous design patents.

    --
    Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    1. Re:At least there's no bias in the summary... by andydread · · Score: 1

      Well you can thank your hero Apple for this. They are the ones that sued and no Samsung is not suing world + dog. They are countersuing Apple. Sorry fail.

    2. Re:At least there's no bias in the summary... by RazorSharp · · Score: 1

      The eloquent wit of your rhetoric compels me to agree with you.

      Hey, kid, go back to school. There's a class called "English" you seemed to have missed. Do you really expect to be taken seriously when you say things such as "Sorry fail"? Where you fail is reading comprehension. MachineShedFred never said Apple was his hero. He didn't even really stick up for them. He just criticized the summary, which obviously lacks objectivity, by pointing out a counter-argument.

      --
      "From the depths of my skeptical and rationalist soul, I ask the Lord to protect me from California touchie-feeliedom."
    3. Re:At least there's no bias in the summary... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Considering there's a number of companies using 3G technology out there and Apple is the only one that got sued, I think it is pretty tempting to draw the conclusion this is indeed a tit for tat move. Under these assumptions (which are obviously in the summary), there is no analogy to Rambus to be made and Apple's strategy is ridiculously more evil.

    4. Re:At least there's no bias in the summary... by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      One legal victory over a 3G patent that is included in the pool could lead to a whole lot of dominos falling behind the precedent. Sure, Apple and Samsung are having a bit of a bitchfest, but everyone else could end up collateral damage if Samsung wins these, except for other people in the 3G patent pool that could use the same precedent to fuck Samsung over.

      The whole point of having a pool of technologies with "Fair, Reasonable, and Non-discriminatory" licensing is to make a tech like 3G communications available to everyone, as long as they pay up for the whole pool. If Samsung can go after one licensee in retribution for other legal action (whether justified or not), whats to stop them from going after others?

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
  56. Re:A clean uncluttered rectangle wasn't that obvio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, when in The Future(tm) tablets will become those transparent touchscreen displays and nothing more, only one company will be able to produce them, because nobody wants to hang useless fluff around it just to look different.

    Removing elements unnecessary for function is not Apple's huge invention, it's just common sense in design. That's why design patents cover only those parts that don't follow from function - like home button and backside design of iPad.

  57. Learn to spell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's Yuan, not Won. Wake up, editors!

  58. Apple was sued by new management by Quila · · Score: 1

    Everything was fine with the people who did the original deal. New managment came in and thought they could squeeze some money out of Apple since Xerox wasn't itself able to monetize the concepts very well.

  59. my ancient razor has rounded squares by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the firmware is so old, it says cingular, yet it has rounded
    squares. (brand new to me in oct 2006) since the iphone
    came out more than a year later, i see an argument for
    samsung stealing from /motorola/, but so did apple.

  60. Re:Not-quite-objective summary by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

    It cracks me up thinking that for all of their foresight, neither Kubrick nor Clarke could imagine what would happen to IBM.

    --
    Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
  61. Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Rounded corners? Are you fucking kidding me? This is obviously a scam. Apple is nothing but a patent parasite.

  62. Re:A clean uncluttered rectangle wasn't that obvio by MobileTatsu-NJG · · Score: 1

    Take a closer look at those 'PADDs'. They do not look like iPads, they're not even minimalist in any practical sense of the word. You won't find any variant of the PADD that looks like an iPad for the simple reason that they didn't want the props to just look like a nicely cut piece of plexiglass.

    --

    "I like to lick butts!" by MobileTatsu-NJG (#32700246) (Score:5, Informative)

  63. Designers by Quila · · Score: 1

    I can name several famous designers for cars: Harley Earl (Corvette), Julian Thompson (Lotus) Joe Oros (original Mustang), Giacinto Ghia (many), Andrea Pininfarina (many), and Giorgetto Giugiaro (many).

    Car companies cared about design, and the designers became famous. Electronics companies usually don't care about design, so anybody they have working in their tiny, under-funded design departments isn't going to become famous.

  64. Re:A clean uncluttered rectangle wasn't that obvio by andydread · · Score: 0

    And what does Apple's current generation of products look like? Gosh Florian you can do better than that.

  65. Re:Not-quite-objective summary by andydread · · Score: 1
  66. Re:Not-quite-objective summary by andydread · · Score: 1

    Apple should have done that too Or is it ok to steal conecpts what about actual products?.

  67. MS outmaneuvered Apple by tgibbs · · Score: 1

    This was early on. There's no question that Apple was outmaneuvered by MS. Apple really wanted MS Word and Excel on Macintosh. Microsoft was reluctant, raising concerns that they would have to use Apple user interface elements. They insisted that Apple license those aspects of the Mac interface to Microsoft. At the time, Microsoft was using a very different approach to Windows, with "panes" instead of overlapping windows, and Apple apparently saw little harm. Once they had the license, Microsoft released a new version of Windows with overlapping windows and many other Mac-like features. Apple sued, but unfortunately for Apple, the license to MS was not limited to a particular version of Windows or to particular programs. The courts found that the features licensed to MS were precisely those that Apple had the strongest claim to having created.

  68. Apple stold JooJoo's "rounded corners" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    See for yourself.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JooJoo

  69. Re:A clean uncluttered rectangle wasn't that obvio by delinear · · Score: 1

    It seems like design students with incredible vision are clearly more common than you seem to think. Taking a single phone and a single tablet out of context from a manufacturer who has probably produced hundreds of variant designs over the years seems like a desperate ploy to win an argument. You could equally argue this shows Samsung's incredible diversity compared to Apple's "come up with one design and slightly tweak it ad infinitum" approach, but then that would be just as blind as your skewed point of view. The truth is its in the customer's interest for there to be good competition on the technical front combined with simplification on the design front. If one particular manufacturer is allowed to "own" simplified design, that's bad news for everyone. This isn't about "my favourite tech company is better than yours" it's about "this stupid law is holding back advances at what could otherwise be an amazing point in the history of technology".

  70. Re:A clean uncluttered rectangle wasn't that obvio by CheerfulMacFanboy · · Score: 1

    > Except nobody bar a few design students with incredible vision (but without the support of large companies) knew it at all. If it was obvious then early 1990s tablet PCs would have soon had the same design.

    Oh you mean like the PADDs in STNG or the ones in all sorts of other SciFi since the 80s. They are the ones with the vision, the SciFi writers, producers and set designers. Apple just managed implementation.

    sensationull in 2032: Flying to Mars? Bah, NASA just managed implementation. Anyway, PADDs come in all kinds of shapes, and the only ones kinda looking like the iPad are the ultra cheap props consisting of a piece of plastic with the static "GUI" printed on it.

    --
    Fandroids hate facts.
  71. The money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't be silly. The money wouldn't go to innovation. It would go to the executives who "solved" the litigation problems.

  72. Japan != Won by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Derp.

  73. Samsung's exorbitant license demands by tgibbs · · Score: 1

    The Dutch court found that Samsung's license demands were unreasonable:

    At a hearing on September 26, it turned out that Samsung was seeking a royalty of 2.4% of the chip price for each (!) of its asserted patents. In today's ruling, the Dutch court says that Samsung's offer was so far out of the FRAND ballpark that, in the court's opinion, Samsung has failed to honor its obligation to make an offer on FRAND terms.

  74. Re:Not-quite-objective summary by Sarten-X · · Score: 2

    That's a big post full of ad hominem, so I'll respond to the meaningful parts:

    i actually thought ... that was a real ipad in that movie and they just took decades to release it.

    The point of a trademark or design patent is to establish a distinctive appearance, so that it is clear at a quick glance what product you're seeing. It could be the logo, or the shape of a bottle, or something more general, like a color or a particular plaid. In essence, a trademark protects a distinctive aspect of a product, and a design patent protects a distinctive product in particular.

    The entire point of this thread is to point out that the design patent for the iPad really only applies to the iPad, and the Galaxy Tab is clearly a copy. The "prior art" in 2001 is so different, even from a large distance, that it is not enough to invalidate the design patent.

    So we see a difference between the ipad and the 2001 device, which we accept differentiates them. We also have the beveled edge which differs significantly between the ipad and the galaxy, yet only you fail to accept that as a difference.

    It's certainly a difference, just not one that matters. The Galaxy Tab is also missing a large apple on the back, but nobody's going to notice that when walking past a user on the street. Similarly, the only way to notice the different bevel is a close comparison. The appearance of an iPad is iconic. The different bevel does not significantly differentiate the two. Yes, a blind person could tell the difference, but the iPad isn't being heavily marketed for blind people, is it?

    i was saying there is a very obvious difference in profile between the 2001 device and the ipad just as there is a very obvious difference between the aspect ratio of the ipad and galaxy.

    This is actually the first time I realized they had different aspect ratios. Thanks for the information. Given that it's taken over a year for a potential customer (who was looking into buying a tablet this past spring, then decided against it) to notice, I'm going to go ahead and lump this in the "subtle difference" category as well.

    it's a square on the button, not a fucking house you blind idiot

    Oh hey, it is. Sorry about that. The extent of my Apple product ownership is an iPod Touch that I keep out in my car. I've used an iPad, and as mentioned earlier I was looking at buying one. I must not have been paying close attention to the exact picture used, and my references from this thread have been found through Google.

    Again, that's the whole idea behind a patented design: A potential customer should be able to recognize the product by its appearance from a casual glance.

    The point is...

    The point is there are a number of similarities and differences between the two real devices, but on the whole the differences are far smaller than the similarities. The similarities outweigh the differences so much that the two are indistinguishable at a distance of only 10 feet. Conversely, the differences between the modern devices and the tablets from 2001 are much more pronounced, to the point where even from 10 feet away they are clearly not the same product.

    It's not a question of whether there are differences or not. It's a question of whether the differences are significant enough to distinguish the pro

    --
    You do not have a moral or legal right to do absolutely anything you want.
  75. Re:A clean uncluttered rectangle wasn't that obvio by Sarten-X · · Score: 1

    The point where it's no longer an infringement is the point where someone walking by can take a casual glance and see that you are or are not using an Apple iPad. Your GPS unit is probably much smaller than an iPad, and likely would be used mounted in a car. A casual observer would not look at it and say "Oh, is that an iPad?", so it's not damaging to Apple's brand recognition.

    Apple didn't patent a rectangle. They patented a particular appearance, and Samsung has copied most of the details of that appearance (and note that the 10.1 tab is even worse than what's in that comparison, being the same size and having the logo less obvious). Samsung could have differentiated by adding a few more buttons, or putting a pattern on the bezel, or any number of other things. They didn't.

    --
    You do not have a moral or legal right to do absolutely anything you want.
  76. Apple spends more on snacks by Brannon · · Score: 2

    than Samsung spends on R&D. Do you think that the iPhone and iPad just fell from the sky? There's a huge amount of R&D (probably more D than R, but still) that goes into those things.

    What difference does it make if Apple acquired some IP by purchasing other companies--they are still paying for it, right? That's still an R&D expenditure.

    What's more, Apple's never tried to submarine their patents into some global telecommunications standard (which required RAND terms, btw) and then came back a few years later and started extorting from licensees in a decidedly discriminatory fashion.

    What the hell are you talking about?

    1. Re:Apple spends more on snacks by mjwx · · Score: 0

      What's more, Apple's never tried to submarine their patents into some global telecommunications standard

      No, they submarined in design patents over basic shapes.

      Remember that Apple sued first, they did not sue for license fees, they sued to stop a competitor from releasing a superior product that would take sales from their product. Samsung does not sue to stop competitors to stop them, Samsung prefer to negotiate license fees. Samsung is suing in retaliation to Apple's unethical efforts.

      Stop pretending that Apple is innocent and Samsung is guilty here, it's the other way around.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
  77. Re:Not-quite-objective summary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The point is there are a number of similarities and differences between the two real devices, but on the whole the differences are far smaller than the similarities.

    Really? You should actually look at them in real life, because they most certainly are not. If you actually list those differences and look at the two devices you'll find they are very different, in much the same way as the pre-ipad archos tablets are similar to the ipad, same front dominated by screen with a black bezel and rounded corners.

    Conversely, the differences between the modern devices and the tablets from 2001 are much more pronounced

    Ok then, do your verbose description of the design comparing an archos from before the ipad to your one of the ipad, you'll find that they are the same sans the button component, which is also different on the galaxy as it has capacitive buttons on the screen. So, by your own test, if the galaxy infringes on the ipad then the ipad infringes on devices that came before it.

    I do view the issue objectively. I also recognize that this is not a deterministic problem, where we can just find any subtle difference and declare the devices wholly different because of that.

    Clearly you don't view it objectively because you did not list the differences between both the devices, just the similarities. You'll come up with a more quantifiable set of data, and also you fail to apply your 'test' to devices that came before the ipad, showing that your only concern is whether samsung infringed upon apple, not whether apple infringed upon anyone that came before it in exactly the same way.

  78. Re:Not-quite-objective summary by exomondo · · Score: 1

    try this test: Write down a verbose description of the design, using as few actual measurements as possible. For the iPad, this would be something like "A rectangular platform with a glossy front surface. The front has a touch screen surrounded by a bezel roughly half an inch wide. There is a single concave button on a short side of the bezel with a picture of a house on it. The reverse is nondescript, with few markings except an Apple logo. In profile, the device has an overall flat appearance and curved edges, and is roughly a quarter of an inch thick." Now write one for the Galaxy Tab, and the 2001 tablet. Compare all three. If two descriptions are mostly the same (in meaning), the products are likely indistinguishable.

    Funny, you should probably try that test with this or this or any one of these.

  79. Get a clue please by Kartu · · Score: 1

    Samsung's revenue is 3 times bigger than Apple's. Company makes major advances in technologies, they have best screens on the market, again developed in-house.

    And no, buying technologies made by startups is not R&D investment. That includes withdrawing an existing app from app store and making it a major feature in the next gen phone. Neither does assembling your product using existing technologies.

    Anyone recalls any other "don't hold it that way" phone pretty please? That's how product development works at Apple.

    Out of major players Apple was the first company, that tried to simply ban competitor's product by abusing legal system. (they also tried that two decades ago vs Microsoft, but that time they've failed) German's can't buy German version of galaxy tabs, because those are rectangular with rounded corners. Just like Samsung's photo frame, released in 2006:

    They never tried to "submarine their telecommunications patents", because they don't have any. They've patented anything they could, like "multi touch on mobile devices". They've re-patented ancient "connector with magnetic lock" technology, by simply adding "in mobile devices" to it. Damn, they even hold "community design" for "rectangular device with rounded corners". That's truly innovative, costs billions of dollars spent on snacks for R&D.