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Google Warned Samsung Galaxy Tab Was "Too Similar"

tlhIngan writes "Some interesting news has come out of Apple's filings against Samsung. First, Google warned Samsung that their 'P1' (Galaxy Tab) and 'P3' (Galaxy Tab 10.1) tablets were 'too similar' to the iPad. In addition, Samsung's own Product Design Group note it was 'regrettable' that the Galaxy S 'looks similar' to the iPhone. Finally, how designers at a Samsung-sponsored evaluation noted the Galaxy S 'copied the iPhone too much' and 'innovation is needed.' Of course, Samsung has some ammunition of its own, including how Apple copied Sony's designs. In unrelated news, Judge Grewal has sanctioned Samsung for not preserving emails from automatic deletion, even after litigation has begun."

251 comments

  1. Again? by neo8750 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Again and again and again.... Cant we just move on? Its an electronic tablet its going to be similar cause well its a tablet. I'm sick of this shit anyone else?

    1. Re:Again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Everyone except Apple's lawyers.

    2. Re:Again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I too am sick of this shit.

    3. Re:Again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If you are sick of it just move on, why comment?

    4. Re:Again? by CodeHxr · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I'm sure that most of us are. It seems that our only recourse, though, is to simply not buy Apple products to show them we disapprove of their actions. Good luck getting the masses to part with their iToys though.

    5. Re:Again? by _KiTA_ · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I'm sure that most of us are. It seems that our only recourse, though, is to simply not buy Apple products to show them we disapprove of their actions. Good luck getting the masses to part with their iToys though.

      Similarly, those of us who think Samsung are in the wrong will avoid buying "iToy" ripoffs.

    6. Re:Again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      I'll alert the courts. I'm sure they'll wrap this up immediately, sire.

    7. Re:Again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      >Similarly, those of us idiots who think Samsung are in the wrong will avoid buying "iToy" ripoffs.

      FTFY ;)

    8. Re:Again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It's a bottle of cola. It's going to be similar because, well, it's a bottle of cola. Except, well, a bottle of Coke is a unique trade design that is protected by a similar design patent to ensure other bottles of cola don't mimic their design with the intent of looking _the same_. After all, "the same" and "similar" are two different things.

      Yes, tablets are going to have similar design requirements but why did Samsung design theirs to look _the same_ as the iPad while other tablet manufacturers were able to not do so?

    9. Re:Again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      if you can't immediately tell the difference between a samsung tab and an apple ipad, then you aren't someone who would truly care which one you've got anyway.

      hell they've got different aspect ratios for christ's sake. they're not even the same goddamn shape of rectangle!

    10. Re:Again? by Chrisq · · Score: 1

      if you can't immediately tell the difference between a samsung tab and an apple ipad, then you aren't someone who would truly care which one you've got anyway.

      That's very presumptuous of you, for all you know the GP poster might be gay.

    11. Re:Again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who cares what a borderline illiterate thinks?

    12. Re:Again? by jkrise · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I would question the IQ of any customer buying a TV or a computer or a tablet device based on how it looks from 10 feet distance; and not bothering what's inside it. I would ban design patents for ALL electronic goods based on the above principle.

      --
      If you keep throwing chairs, one day you'll break windows....
    13. Re:Again? by tom17 · · Score: 2

      This is wildly different. In the case of the Coke bottle, it is a recognisable sculpted design due to the waist. If they had patented the regular straight-sided bottle shape, it would have been just as ridiculous trying to defend that as it is to defend a rectangle with rounded corners.

      The plain straight sided bottle is a basic shape (As are numerous other bottle shapes). The coke bottle is not a basic shape.
      The rounded rectangle iPhone is a basic shape. If they wanted to "Think Different", maybe they should have made it narrower in the middle or some other unique design feature.

    14. Re:Again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      if you can't immediately tell the difference between a samsung tab and an apple iPad...

      Then you're a Samsung lawyer?

      ... then you aren't someone who would truly care which one you've got anyway.

      And that is _EXACTLY_ what design patents are intended to protect against - confusion in the market place. "I'm going to buy an iPad" turning into "oh, I bought something called a Galaxy Tab instead... Whoops."

    15. Re:Again? by h4rr4r · · Score: 2

      A bottle of coke is a design that is not primarily functional. The tablet design is.

    16. Re:Again? by Desler · · Score: 1

      Then maybe you should read the packaging before buying? We can't even hold people to standards of basic literacy?

    17. Re:Again? by characterZer0 · · Score: 1

      If we do not require basic literacy to vote, we sure are not going to require it to buy computers.

      --
      Go green: turn off your refrigerator.
    18. Re:Again? by Truedat · · Score: 2
      But why should slashdot move on from these submissions when members such as yourself keep swallowing the click bait? If you look at these Apple vs Samsung/google submissions they regularly attract posts in their hundreds.

      I often hear Android fans say that they refuse to buy Apple as a sign of disapproval, so how about not clicking on these stories for the same reason?

    19. Re:Again? by butchersong · · Score: 1

      It's a tablet. Short of mangling the aspect ratio to make yours a unique shape how do you go about doing this? You have a screen, you put your electronics behind the screen, you try to minimize buttons/case size as much as possible... you do this and any table becomes hard to distinguish from an ipad unless you paint it hot pink or something.

    20. Re:Again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But shiny toys are more important than dumb things like voting. Everyone knows that voting is only for old people.

    21. Re:Again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It has fuckin SAMSUNG written in bold font at the top douche bag

    22. Re:Again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ummm .... from judging by your overly flawed logic it's not required to actually possess a brain to be allowed to post comments on slashdot either... Dumbass!

    23. Re:Again? by jedidiah · · Score: 2

      It's the classic catch-22.

              If you don't copy the market leader, you are dismissed out of hand.

              If you do copy the market leader, you are accused of copying.

      It's just that it usually doesn't lead to patent trolling suits and your product being banned from sale anywhere.

      "Why does god need a starship?"

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    24. Re:Again? by jedidiah · · Score: 2

      That's the beautiful thing about capitalism and the free market.

      The peasantry is in control rather than a few Robber Barons.

      "Too much like Apple" doesn't suit my requirements. It has nothing to do with confusing some corporate brand fixation with something that actually justifies some kind of loyalty.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    25. Re:Again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You have a screen, you put your electronics behind the screen

      The design patent does not exclude competitors from doing that. Have you read it?

      you try to minimize buttons/case size as much as possible

      You do that because Apple does that. When iPhone first came out, and often still today, a vocal minority howled about how few buttons it has and about the minimal bezel. iPad simply scales up iPhone's form.

    26. Re:Again? by tom17 · · Score: 1

      I think you meant to reply to the post before mine?

    27. Re:Again? by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      Don't you mean, "Not buy anything but Apple products." You know, to show them we disapprove of the copiers?

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    28. Re:Again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They do bother with what's inside it. Just because they also consider aesthetics as a factor in their purchase doesn't prevent consideration of everything else.

      And, dim as you are you'll need to read this twice: governments wouldn't need to ban design patents, they'd need to not issue them in the first place. A subtle disntinction to the witless but an important one to the most of us.

    29. Re:Again? by toddmbloom · · Score: 0

      So you'd rather blame the messanger rather then the thief?

      Why not stop buying anything from Samsung to show that you are displeased with their "copy everyone" strategy?

    30. Re:Again? by MobileTatsu-NJG · · Score: 1

      Actually, no, it doesn't The logo is on the back.

      It's worth noting, though, that I got mine before this case fired up.

      --

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

    31. Re:Again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      why would "confusion in the marketplace" matter if the consumer does not care what brand of product they own, only that they own a product of a certain type?

      I say FUCK YOU CONSUMER if you can't even be bothered to check to see if you're purchasing the product you think you are.

      I cant' say I've ever gone to the car dealership to purchase a ford and accidently driven away in a kia.

    32. Re:Again? by cpu6502 · · Score: 0

      >>>not buy Apple products to show them we disapprove of their actions

      No problem.
      Apple gadgets cost 2 times more.
      Not just Macs (see my sig) but phones too. My ISP VirginMobile is selling the non-apple phone with equivalent function at a mere $200. The iphone 4S for $650..... 3 times more. (Meanwhile the HTC Evo4 with enhanced 4G; larger screen is only $300.)

      --
      My AC stalker: " I personally agree with your posts most of the time, but that won't keep me from modding you troll"
    33. Re:Again? by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

      Don't worry, bro. I'm buying even more to make up the difference.

    34. Re:Again? by gnasher719 · · Score: 1

      If you don't copy the market leader, you are dismissed out of hand.

      Did Apple copy the market leader when they released the first iPod? Did they copy the market leader when they released the iPhone? Or the iPad? Or the MacBook Air?

    35. Re:Again? by PintoPiman · · Score: 1

      iToys. Because something *I* like is a tool and something *YOU* like is a toy. Gag me.

    36. Re:Again? by horza · · Score: 2

      Exactly. A screen with a bezel around it can only take so many forms. Why do you think all the big plasma/lcd televisions look nearly the same? And they aren't suing each other. Apple is abusing the patent system to stave off their demise, and taking the piss out of consumers.

      Phillip.

    37. Re:Again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Well yeah. I just got an iPhone with latest iOS off eBay and I need to sell this rubbish.

      Seriously don't know what the fuss is about. I've had to find work arounds for some many things you can accomplish on an unrouted android.

      Multiethnic email signatures? No
      Push mail. No (unless the server Microsoft exchange / active sync type (err wtf is that about from a nix base product))
      Easy access settings shortcut for brightness, data and tethering. No. Removed in this latest version I hear so any apps u paid for for that feature, tough bananas.
      Turn by turn navigation with street names? No
      Oh theres so many more but why moan. I've learned my lesson.

    38. Re:Again? by witchman · · Score: 1

      If you don't copy the market leader, you are dismissed out of hand.

      Did Apple copy the market leader when they released the first iPod? Did they copy the market leader when they released the iPhone? Or the iPad? Or the MacBook Air?

      http://forums.macnn.com/t/490589/court-docs-show-apple-took-design-inspiration-from-sony

      Yes...they did.

    39. Re:Again? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Then you're a Samsung lawyer?

      Or maybe you're just looking at a turned-off tablet from the front from 3 meters away. And even then, one of the two lawyers in question supplied the correct answer.

    40. Re:Again? by vakuona · · Score: 1

      Sony did not have a product that looks anything like an iPhone. Jony Ive has never hidden the fact that he was inspired by Braun for example. And neither did Steve Jobs hide his admiration for the company that Sony once was. But inspiration and copying are two different things. Inspiration is what you get when you ask, what would a smartphone look like if it had been designed by the Sony of the 80's. Copying is, make a phone that is indistinguishable from an iPhone at first glance.

      Apple was influenced by Sony (in the 80s'), Braun, Leica etc. They admit it. But they didn't make a single Sony look-a-like, or a Leica look-a-like or a Braun look-a-like.

      And Sony was not a market leader in any way, shape or form when it came to smartphones.

    41. Re:Again? by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      That's the beautiful thing about capitalism and the free market.

      What free market? I've never seen one. I doubt you have either. I've been to some flea markets, but that's different.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    42. Re:Again? by farble1670 · · Score: 1

      That's the beautiful thing about capitalism and the free market.
      The peasantry is in control rather than a few Robber Barons.

      you are more confused than you can ever imagine.

    43. Re:Again? by Pieroxy · · Score: 1

      Then you're a Samsung lawyer?

      Or maybe you're just looking at a turned-off tablet from the front from 3 meters away. And even then, one of the two lawyers in question supplied the correct answer.

      Anyone can be lucky, especially when you've got a 50% chance of being correct.

    44. Re:Again? by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      ...which matters not one bit.

      The only difference here is that someone got old and became a hypocrite. What was fine for him to do to others in is youth suddenly became a crime when it was finally done to him.

      You know evil when it does harmful things that are unnecessary.

      Microsoft did it when it sabotaged rivals when it's position left it in no danger from such rivals. This is just Apple doing the same. The wheel has turned and they are the evil empire now.

      All of the pro-Apple rhetoric and marketing nonsense evaporates when you see that the company needs to use the courts as a crutch.

      If they are so easy to copy, then a 20 year monopoly is clearly unwarranted.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    45. Re:Again? by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      Maybe he's sick of the actual lawsuit. Frustrated that there is one in the first place.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    46. Re:Again? by StripedCow · · Score: 1

      The issues related to Apple can actually be split into two domains: a small domain covering technology, and... a significantly larger domain, which is of interest only to metrosexual latte-sipping fashion-victims. Makes one wonder if Slashdot cares about their demographics, or if they simply cannot decouple one thing from the other.

      --
      If Pandora's box is destined to be opened, *I* want to be the one to open it.
    47. Re:Again? by not+flu · · Score: 1

      you try to minimize buttons/case size as much as possible

      You do that because Apple does that. When iPhone first came out, and often still today, a vocal minority howled about how few buttons it has and about the minimal bezel. iPad simply scales up iPhone's form.

      No, you do that because it is the obvious thing to do. I remember back in the 90s when one-line screens on cell phones were the norm and Nokia's newer models had bigger, higher res ones, it was clear to me way back then that the screen size is the primary usability factor of a phone and that touch screens would be inevitable. I do not claim to have been any visionary, I claim that it was obvious to every dumb kid not even yet in high school 20 years ago. As for the lack of buttons... it is a very serious compromise, there's no denying it. It is also the obviously right choice if you want the web in your pocket, as there's really no other choice.

    48. Re:Again? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      It's not just about luck. Will you be able to tell two flat panel TVs from two different manufacturers apart from 10 meters away? Because that's more or less the equivalent of what the lawyers were asked to do.

    49. Re:Again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Meh, you don't even need that. Last I checked, tablets and such are generally locked aware somewhere to discourage theft and retrieved at request. So, you'd have to have some verbal tic that where you say Samsung when you really meant Apple.

    50. Re:Again? by Tough+Love · · Score: 1

      I'm sure that most of us are. It seems that our only recourse, though, is to simply not buy Apple products to show them we disapprove of their actions. Good luck getting the masses to part with their iToys though.

      Similarly, those of us who think Samsung are in the wrong will avoid buying "iToy" ripoffs.

      So basically, iZombies will continue believing everything Apple tells them including that Apple products don't suck and the other 95% of us can get on with life.

      --
      When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
    51. Re:Again? by redlemming · · Score: 1

      It is not clear that there is any legitimacy to the system of "design patents".

      Laws are created -- mostly -- by legal professionals, who have a huge conflict of interest with respect to the size and complexity of the legal system. Once the laws are created, then legal professionals then argue and judge cases arising under them (sometimes the same people involved in the creation of the original laws!).

      Having unnecessary, complex, or confusing laws in the legal system creates lots of future (artificial) demand for the services of legal professionals as a class in society, which in turn provides increased job security and the likelihood of greater pay, and the existence of such laws is indicative of widespread problems with ethics in that profession.

      Similarly, having unneeded bureaucracy also creates an artificial demand for the services of legal professionals, who get paid to help people and organizations navigate that bureaucracy.

      A fundamental right could be asserted to the effect that consumers not be subject to fraud in business transactions. From such a right, it would follow that a company can not fraudulently attempt to market products that directly masquerade as another company's products, and some simple, straightforward law to that effect could be created to enforce such a right. Such a law would be similar to laws preventing counterfeiting of money.

      There is no need for a system of "design patents".

      A law like that would probably also make unnecessary the complex and bureaucratic system of trademark law (and would be less infringing on the 1st Amendment).

      If the product is sold in Samsung packaging and the stuff inside the package doesn't carry the Apple logo, then no reasonable person would suppose a fraud has been committed.

      We could have a simple, basic, and easy to understand law to govern business fraud.

      If we instead have a complex system of design patent law and we also need a bureaucracy to support that system, then that raises very serious questions regarding the ethics of legal professionals, as a class in society.

      James Madison gave the US an open-ended Bill of Rights to prevent excessive government, and excessive law is certainly a form of excessive government, a point that those who swear oaths to uphold the Bill of Rights might want to remember.

    52. Re:Again? by Grudge2012 · · Score: 0

      ...which matters not one bit.

      The only difference here is that someone got old and became a hypocrite. What was fine for him to do to others in is youth suddenly became a crime when it was finally done to him.

      Nope. The issue here is that you don't understand what the quote means because you don't know the background, while Jobs did. http://nancyprager.wordpress.com/2007/05/08/good-poets-borrow-great-poets-steal/

      One of the surest tests [of the superiority or inferiority of a poet] is the way in which a poet borrows. Immature poets imitate; mature poets steal; bad poets deface what they take, and good poets make it into something better, or at least something different. The good poet welds his theft into a whole of feeling which is unique, utterly different than that from which it is torn; the bad poet throws it into something which has no cohesion. A good poet will usually borrow from authors remote in time, or alien in language, or diverse in interest.

      As for your fantasies about no other company ever suing because of designs, both Samsung and Motorola did long before Apple. Motorola is actually one of very few companies who got a preliminary injunction over a design patent.

    53. Re:Again? by Grudge2012 · · Score: 0

      If you don't copy the market leader, you are dismissed out of hand.

      Did Apple copy the market leader when they released the first iPod? Did they copy the market leader when they released the iPhone? Or the iPad? Or the MacBook Air?

      http://forums.macnn.com/t/490589/court-docs-show-apple-took-design-inspiration-from-sony

      Yes...they did.

      Let's ignore that that article pretty much says the opposite - here's a nice quote: "Another set of documents show Best Buy alerting Samsung that a number of customers had returned their tablets because they incorrectly thought they had bought iPads."

    54. Re:Again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So basically, sZombies will continue believing everything Samsung tells them including that Samsung products don't suck and the other 95% of us can get on with life.

      There. FTFY.

    55. Re:Again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One of two? Sounds pretty much like guessing to me...

    56. Re:Again? by vakuona · · Score: 1

      You fail at logic. A patent monopoly is warranted _precisely_ because it is easy to copy. if it wasn't easy to copy, there would be no need for patents because the difficulty in copying would be protection enough.

  2. and everyone copied microsoft by alen · · Score: 0

    all the tablets look like thinner versions of the tablet bill gates presented in 2002. of course it used x86 because everything else was too slow at the time

    i like apple, but they took OS X, stripped a lot of unneeded parts out, changed code to run it on ARM CPU's and called it the iphone/ipad

    1. Re:and everyone copied microsoft by binarylarry · · Score: 4, Funny

      Those bastards! Next thing you know, someone going to start building phones based on Linux!

      --
      Mod me down, my New Earth Global Warmingist friends!
    2. Re:and everyone copied microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i like apple, but they took OS X, stripped a lot of unneeded parts out, changed code to run it on ARM CPU's and called it the iphone/ipad

      Even if the kernel between OS X and iOS is the same there is a lot of stuff built on top of it that required a lot of work. Saying iOS is just stropped down OS X is about like saying Android is stripped down Linux.

    3. Re:and everyone copied microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ohhh give me a break iOS uses the same old broken gay UI widgets Apple has always used since the fuckin 80's. The only difference between then and now is that 256 colors was invented and they added some fuckin gradients around the place. Other than that SSDD.

    4. Re:and everyone copied microsoft by ags1 · · Score: 1

      Personally I think it looks more like a 1993 Apple Newton. In form and function that is, not so much in style. Got to remember it was released in 93, it wasn't possible to make tech as skinny and sleek as an ipad. The 2002 microsoft tablet has a flip screen and keyboard. In form and function it is far closer to a laptop then an ipad.

    5. Re:and everyone copied microsoft by Pieroxy · · Score: 1

      all the tablets look like thinner versions of the tablet bill gates presented in 2002. of course it used x86 because everything else was too slow at the time

      i like apple, but they took OS X, stripped a lot of unneeded parts out, changed code to run it on ARM CPU's and called it the iphone/ipad

      And they sold a fucking shitload of them. You forgot that last part.

      So yes, they had the idea before everyone else to do it. Isn't that something?

    6. Re:and everyone copied microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it is not easy..

      samsung

  3. One two three..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Start fight. Tantanaka.....tantanakka....tan.

    1. Re:One two three..... by MickyTheIdiot · · Score: 1

      foul

  4. It's a rectangle. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 4, Interesting

    There were featureless rounded corner rectangle tablets before the iPad.

    There were touchscreen driven grid of icons phone user interfaces before it iPhone.

    Apparently the slide to unlock is so obvious that Apple have to publicly apologise for claiming otherwise.

    They're similar because it's an obvious idea which had been done before.

    --
    SJW n. One who posts facts.
    1. Re:It's a rectangle. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Even those tablets made of stone or clay, made thousands of years ago, have rounded corners ...

      As for the same proportions, google "golden ratio/segment/section". The greeks were the first one to discover it, thousands of years ago. Sorry to disappoint, there's no conspiracy.

      Apply that math to some of the more common resolutions, and you'll see what it's all about.

      Regards,
      JW

    2. Re:It's a rectangle. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bullshit. Yes, bullshit. It's not the concept, but the untold man-hours and completely unglamorous research that went in to bringing the devices to market that matter here. Sure you can spout lists of disparate features that were available in other products, but the real innovation is taking the right ones and putting them together in a usable product. Apple came up with the formula, made it success, and everyone copied them. (A story as old as Apple itself)

      You talk as if some jerkoff at apple thought "Oh, hey, black rounded rectangle thing device" and bam, ipad appeared. Frankly, it's insulting to the thousands of developers that worked hard to bring those devices to market.

      It's like saying the horseless carriage was already around and obvious, and that Ford really didn't do anything special when they brought the model-T, the first mass market car, to market.. While ignoring that whole new sciences of mass production and supply chain management were created in the process. Things that every car makesr to this day rely on to bring cars to a mass market.

    3. Re:It's a rectangle. by SilenceBE · · Score: 5, Informative

      The problem is that people aren't aware that the discussions isn't about rectangles or even round corners. It is just a cheap trick to make ridicule about a "contender" or something/somebody that we hate, just to give the impression that they are the weaker party.

      The problem is that those lawsuits aren't about rectangles or corners and that it is a bit more detailed then that and also much broader.

      Really in all honestly I can't really look at the total package of Samsung tablet offering without having the feeling that they clearly looked for inspiration to some of Apple offerings. You can debate all day long about how stupid is that companies can "patent" designs, but you really must be blind what the source of inspiration was for some things. Look at Samsung Kies for example.

      If you take some steps backs and forget about the rectangle stuff and see it in more detail and especially as whole package, the fact that Google warned Samsung that it was to similar may be not that stupid after all.

      Then again this is slashdot an this may be the same like "cursing in a church" but hey... .

    4. Re:It's a rectangle. by dimeglio · · Score: 1

      Doesn't work that way. It's who patents their method first that gets the legal claim.

      For example, there are infinite ways to unlock a device. Why choose slide instead of twist, for example? Apple claims that it's because they copied and that's a valid point.

      --
      Views expressed do not necessarily reflect those of the author.
    5. Re:It's a rectangle. by russotto · · Score: 3, Informative

      The problem is that those lawsuits aren't about rectangles or corners and that it is a bit more detailed then that and also much broader.

      Look at the design patent Apple is suing over. It is exactly about rectangles and corners. There's not much else to it. Electronic device, flat, rounded corners, glass front, rectangular screen area.

    6. Re:It's a rectangle. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you realize the model-T WASN'T anything special? What made it stand out was the manufacturing process behind it - not the actual end product. There were dozens of *vastly* superior cars available, other than the model-T. Its the manufacturing process which allowed Ford to offer a low price, making it an every man's car. The fact is had round wheels didn't make it special - and yet's that's Apple's line in the sand.

    7. Re:It's a rectangle. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even those tablets made of stone or clay, made thousands of years ago, have rounded corners ...

      We tried making them with nice, sharp, right angle corners, but they kept breaking off.

    8. Re:It's a rectangle. by Antarius · · Score: 1

      But I bet you're one of the people who say the CSIRO is a patent troll for putting their radar-tweaking technology ideas into a way to solve problems with wifi signals.

    9. Re:It's a rectangle. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      Really in all honestly I can't really look at the total package of Samsung tablet offering without having the feeling that they clearly looked for inspiration to some of Apple offerings.

      So? You can look at the Apple designs and see others that they clearly looked to for inspiration. For example, the TC1100 cited in the infamous rounded corners parent and the AT&T broadband phone for the now familiar touchscreen and grid of icons on a phone look.

      You can debate all day long about how stupid is that companies can "patent" designs, but you really must be blind what the source of inspiration was for some things.

      Why do you think I'm blind to it? I can See where Samsung's sedigns were inspired from, and I can see where Apple's designes were inspired from. If inspiration were enough to block, then the iPad would be blocked from sale as well.

      Yes the Samsung stuff is pretty similar to Apple's in appearance, but then Apple's was pretty similar to others in appearance. And the overall appearance of a tablet is basically obvious.

      If you take some steps backs and forget about the rectangle stuff and see it in more detail and especially as whole package,

      Such as? What is it about the iPad that is so unique compared to what came before that the sale of Samsung's one should be blocked or that there was anything to warn about?

      Is the whole package really that similar? iOS is not all that similar ot Android, except in the obvious things (i.e. ones that were not new, such as touch interface, icon grids, ful screen programs only etc).

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    10. Re:It's a rectangle. by hazydave · · Score: 2

      While it's correct that hundreds if not thousands of people worked to bring the first iPad to market, it's absolutely untrue that hundreds or even dozens worked on the physical design. That's all they're talking about here. Apple's designers, and Mr. Jobs himself, were inspired by what came before, both in what didn't work, what did work, what looked cool... and of course, the iPhone before it, which is a nearly identical design on a smaller scale.

      Samsung did no less work in delivering their tablet. Ok, sure, maybe they spent a little less time thinking about the form factor, but it's not as if the iPad was such a major advance for Apple, technologically, since it's basically just a big iPod Touch. Business and success wise, sure, big win there, but that has nothing to do with the level of difficulty. In fact, easier for Apple, since the controlled both SW and HW. Samsung controls far more of the hardware, but they launched tablets before Google was ready for them.

      And in fact, the easy proof for this is going over the various fan sites and artists concepts. The general form factor of the iPhone was long, long rumored before it shipped... artists were posting concepts for over a year, based around the rumor that Apple was developing either a phone or an "all screen" iPod. You only had to look at the Palm TX for inspiration -- keep the screen (identical to the iPhone's), eliminate most of the buttons (which was always a Jobs thing, just like the Mac mouse and touchpads, even today), basically make the shape a bit less distinctive (the TX echoed the old Palm V's slight flange at the bottom, intended to assist your grip on the thing), and there's your iPhone. They even kept the same basic "row of icons" UI, though of course, unlike the Palm, the original iPhone didn't allow any control over where each icon went.

      Same circle of rumors surrounding the iPad. Only, much less "originality" in the artists guesses... everyone pretty much figured it was going to be a big fat iPod.

      --
      -Dave Haynie
    11. Re:It's a rectangle. by hazydave · · Score: 1

      It also doesn't really look all that much like the iPad they did ultimately produce. That alone should have invalidated the claims, if not the patent itself.

      --
      -Dave Haynie
    12. Re:It's a rectangle. by hazydave · · Score: 1

      This is a design patent, not a useful system or business method patent.

      --
      -Dave Haynie
    13. Re:It's a rectangle. by hazydave · · Score: 1

      Oh, back to the slider. The first to file gets the patent. However, that just means that if there is a first to invent instead, who can prove the prior art, the first to file doesn' t get the patent, neither does the first to file. In the past, in the US, if you could prove first to invent, you might get the patent even if you filed previously.

      There have been numerous examples posted showing slide to unlock on other devices. Though it is a stupid argument... it's trivial enough to change that UI.

      --
      -Dave Haynie
    14. Re:It's a rectangle. by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      > Doesn't work that way. It's who patents their method first that gets the legal claim.

      THAT is nonsense and contrary to the intended purpose of a patent system.

      Patents aren't a virtual land grab. They are a means to encourage the disclosure of trade secrets. They aren't meant for every stupid little trivial idea that might pop into your mother-in-law's head.

      They're more for things that have been stumping engineers for decades if not centuries.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    15. Re:It's a rectangle. by amRadioHed · · Score: 1

      For example, there are infinite ways to unlock a device. Why choose slide instead of twist, for example?

      Sure there are infinite possible ways to unlock a device, but they are not all equal. For example twist can't be done with one hand.

      --
      We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
    16. Re:It's a rectangle. by PintoPiman · · Score: 1

      Your legal brief on this matter seems air-tight. You should contact the judge and inform him that your expertise on the matter is available for his assistance!

    17. Re:It's a rectangle. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The complaint Apple made listed twenty five details Samsung lifted from the iPad.

    18. Re:It's a rectangle. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NEC called...it appears every laptop made by Apple looks like the NEC UltraLite.

      http://www.obsoletecomputermuseum.org/necultralite/

      Fuck Apple, Fuck Google.

    19. Re:It's a rectangle. by Pieroxy · · Score: 1

      As some other poster said, there is a heck of a lot more to the patent than what you claim. The fact is that those patents are public and Samsung had full access to them BEFORE designing their products.

      If they don't fucking care one bit to even take a trainee to look this over - don't forget they're a big company making a product that competes directly with Apple's who's been very straightforward they'd sue anyone infringing - then let them fight their fight. I mean, if anything, they've been at least as stupid as Apple.

    20. Re:It's a rectangle. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Absolutely, if the iPhone had never come around, today's "smartphones" would be laughably bad for everything but making phone calls.

    21. Re:It's a rectangle. by StripedCow · · Score: 1

      There is nothing wrong with one company offering the same as another company. Cars all offer a means of transportation. Do they sue eachother for that basic fact? (No.)

      If the implementation of their engines was identical, then of course, they would sue, but that is not the case, and neither do the iPhone or Samsung share the same underlying implementation. That is what counts here.

      Now, if Ford made a car that *looks* just like a BMW, then the latter company may start a lawsuit, but... that discussion does not belong here on Slashdot (!!!) So please look elsewhere and find yourself a metrosexual latte-sipping fashion-victim to listen to your crap.

      --
      If Pandora's box is destined to be opened, *I* want to be the one to open it.
    22. Re:It's a rectangle. by russotto · · Score: 1

      As some other poster said, there is a heck of a lot more to the patent than what you claim.

      Like what? I'm referring to D504889.

    23. Re:It's a rectangle. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you realize the words coming out of your mouth? Do you not see the point of all this?

      The model-T is not just a car, it's raw-materials-to-final-product system that made it superior. It was cheaper. It was easier to make. It had consitant quality and standardized parts. There were a lot of them around you could borrow parts from! The care on it's own was sort of crappy, but you could actually buy one and actually affordable maintain it after purchase.

      This halo of corresponding, intangible, services and circumstances surrounding the model-T is more important than the vehicle itself! There are /deep/ parallels with the apple experience here, and they are the real reason Apple is cleaning up the market, and why their competitors flounder as much as they do succeed.

      Not some "army of fanbois" or some other laughable vast conspiracy after your pet device.

  5. So they look alike. It's called "form factor." by sandytaru · · Score: 5, Insightful

    My Samsung 40" television looks exactly like a 40" Sony television. My LG washing machine and dryer looks suspiciously similar to a washing machine and dryer from Kenmore. And my Starbucks coffee tureen is the spitting image of the one I have from Seattle's Best! When you are talking about devices that perform similar tasks, they are going to look alike.

    There's only so many ways to build a computer, and when you're trying to stuff as many electronics in a slender LCD screen as you can, it's probably going to look like a plastic slab.

    --
    Occasionally living proof of the Ballmer peak.
  6. Re:So they look alike. It's called "form factor." by alen · · Score: 4, Informative

    that's because seatle's best is owned by starbucks. they are a wholesale brand of starbucks

  7. 7.7 ? by synapse7 · · Score: 1

    I thought the latest proceedings were regarding the tab 7.7 so would this be relevant in that case? Or are there still suits pending on the 10" tab? I guess I can't keep up any more.

    1. Re:7.7 ? by synapse7 · · Score: 1

      So the article can't quote anybody as saying Samsung was warned, or google employs somebody named Google?

  8. The one similarity that bugs me. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have a first generation Motorola Droid, and I have used iPods and iPhones that other people own after I got my Motorola Droid. I _HATE_ the one button to rule them all approach of the iDevices. No back button? WTF!

    So when I see these Samsung devices with the "One Button" I just laugh and move on. It looks tacky. I don't even care if it has the back button and the others. It brings out the disgust I have when trying to navigate an iDevice on a gut level that makes me not want those devices.

  9. Rounded corners by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They are the work of the Devil, I tell you.

  10. Compaq should sue everyone by WillAdams · · Score: 2

    for copying the TC1000:

    http://pencomputing.com/frames/tpc_compaq.html

      - Silver and black
      - rounded corners
      - screen takes up almost entire front surface

    --
    Sphinx of black quartz, judge my vow.
    1. Re:Compaq should sue everyone by hazydave · · Score: 2

      And a bunch of others (year indicates introduction, not shipments):

      HP Slate 500, 2009: http://h71016.www7.hp.com/html/Slate/index.asp
      CrunchPad, 2008: http://www.esarcasm.com/8319/crunchpad-dead/
      Axiotron Modbook 2007: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Axiotron_Modbook
      Knight-Ridder tablet, 1994 : http://adverlab.blogspot.com/2010/09/ipad-like-newspaper-tablet-concept-from.html
      Arthur C. Clarke's Newspad: 1968: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-3949GAIokg&feature=player_embedded

      --
      -Dave Haynie
  11. Re:So they look alike. It's called "form factor." by sandytaru · · Score: 2

    It also looks like ones I've seen from Peets, from Jittery Joes, and from McDonalds. My point is that there's only so many ways to make a coffee mug.

    --
    Occasionally living proof of the Ballmer peak.
  12. Google? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Who gives a fuck what Google said or didn't say? How does their opinion matter in a fight between Apple and Samsung?

    The whole fucking thing is turning into a farcical mess. I've seen more adult fights in a school playground.

    Thing is, although I admit I'm on Samsung's side in this bullshit, I'm not pissed at Apple OR Samsung.

    It's the fucking PATENT OFFICE that handed out these patents in the first place that should be lined up against the wall and shot. How the fuck can you patent a rectangular touchscreen that's been (conceptually) in movies for decades? Or a mind-numbingly obvious thing like "swipe to unlock"?

    1. Re:Google? by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

      It's called plausible deniability and affects punishment. If Apple wins that Samsung did copy their design then it matters whether it was accidental or not. If Samsung knew about/was warned long before Apple sued, the punishment would be harsher. Of course no one has won anything yet except Apple's contention that Samsung destroyed emails after they were told to preserve them. Apple will be allowed to mention evidence destruction at trial.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
    2. Re:Google? by MobileTatsu-NJG · · Score: 1

      Who gives a fuck what Google said or didn't say? How does their opinion matter in a fight between Apple and Samsung?

      Isn't it fair to assume that Google sees most, if not all, of the tablets that use their OS? If so, if they see one that makes them say: "err... no dude you really need to uniquify that a bit...", that isn't really a relevant detail?

      Bear in mind, this isn't about functionality (i.e. swipe-to-unlock), this is about cosmetics. It's a design patent, not a patent. The original complaint was that Samsung had duped something like 20 details of the iPad in their design for the Tab. But if Samsung had colored that tablet green, for example, this case would never have come up. because then those two devices would be distinct, and that's the only real requirement to this case.

      So, with that understood, why wouldn't Google's opinion on this topic matter?

      --

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

  13. Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by ilsaloving · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's not just rounded corners.

    As the summary and article state plainly, Samsung made what amounts to a copy of the iPad. If you have difficulty telling the products apart after covering up the brand logos, then they are too similar. It's that simple. From there, it's not a large leap for the original manufacturer to claim the subsequent manufacturer was riding on the firsts success. Hell, didn't that exactly happen in court a few months ago? Samsung's lawyer was asked to tell the court which tablet was which, and he couldn't.

    And when that original manufacturer happens to be Apple... well... That's like pissing off someone high on bath salts and PCP, and then crying foul because they start beating the crap out of you and eating your face.

    There are SO many ways that Samsung could have differentiated their products, but they chose to make it as similar to the iPad as they thought they could get away with. Other manufacturers havn't had any difficulty doing so. There are tablets in various colours, with textured non-slip backs, varying kinds of frontal designs. There were an almost limitless number of ways Samsung could have avoided this right from there start. But they chose not to. And now they're paying the price.

    1. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Samsung's lawyer was asked to tell the court which tablet was which, and he couldn't.

      How close do you need to be to tell an HP from a Dell?

    2. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by parallel_prankster · · Score: 1

      I agree with what you are saying. To begin with I HATE APPLE and their blind fans who believe Steve Jobs was nothing short of Christ or something. But there are some similarities (more than what you would expect) between Samsung and Apple phones. I mean no one is complaining about Lumia being similar to the Iphone! I know there are only so many designs you can come up with, but Samsung it seems wanted to make their products look similar to Apple to maybe become the second choice for people who wanted a similar looking product but not from Apple maybe? I dont know, this is just speculation but there is some truth to the statement that Samsung phone closely resemble the Iphone. But ofcourse this is Slashdot and I am going to be modded down heavily and flamed for saying this!

    3. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by chrb · · Score: 3, Informative

      As the summary and article state plainly, Samsung made what amounts to a copy of the iPad.

      The article and summary also point out that Apple's internal emails apparently show that they copied Sony's designs. If that is true, it will be interesting to see how Sony respond.

      Also interesting to note that Samsung have produced their own before and after graphic for the court, which disproves the Apple fan claims that "all Samsung phones look like the iPhone".

    4. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by ilsaloving · · Score: 1

      Not close at all. Both HP and Dell have such a large variety of different designs across their lineup, that you'd be hard pressed to look at two products from the *same* manufacturer and be able to tell that they are.

    5. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by chrb · · Score: 3, Informative

      Samsung made what amounts to a copy of the iPad.

      The British courts disagree: Apple must run "Samsung did not copy iPad" ads.

    6. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by F.Ultra · · Score: 1

      >Samsung's lawyer was asked to tell the court which tablet was which, and he couldn't.
      Well he was a lawyer, he probably couldn't pick between a tabled and a microwave oven either.

    7. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by cryptolemur · · Score: 1

      I think this is the only industry where making "copies" has any relevance -- cars, microwave owens, sneakers, blazers, airplanes all look alike if you cover the trademarks -- and I'd venture a guess it's because one actor has business model that depends completely on the "coolness factor". And it's not Samsung.

    8. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by whoever57 · · Score: 2

      If you have difficulty telling the products apart after covering up the brand logos, then they are too similar. It's that simple.

      No, it isn't that simple. Only if the key design elements are orignal does it get protection.

      --
      The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
    9. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by ilsaloving · · Score: 4, Funny

      LOL! Reminds of when everyone jumped on the "translucent plastic" bandwagon. I recall seeing microwaves, and even irons, in blueberry iMac colours. I was amused.

      The best though, was when I was flipping through a department store catalogue (in the late 90s) and came across a wooden breadcutting board that was advertised as "Y2K compliant." To this day I regret not having cut out that item and saved it somewhere.

    10. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by ilsaloving · · Score: 0

      Bear in mind though... the judge said Samsung is "not cool enough" to be like an iPad. A fantastic example of a backhanded compliment if I ever heard one. I'm convinced that the judge was just sick of the whole damn thing. IMO neither Samsung nor Apple won that case.

    11. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by tom17 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Someone familiar with the two products could tell easily. Sure, someone unfamiliar could not.

      With the logos obscured, I doubt someone unfamiliar with the latest Corollas & Civics could tell the difference either...

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:CVC2012aaa.jpg

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:2011_Toyota_Corolla_--_NHTSA.jpg

      Shocking new: Similar product looks similar!

    12. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by russotto · · Score: 3, Insightful

      As the summary and article state plainly, Samsung made what amounts to a copy of the iPad. If you have difficulty telling the products apart after covering up the brand logos, then they are too similar. It's that simple.

      Simple and wrong. LCD displays, keyboards, laptops, cardboard boxes, polo shirts, blue jeans, soda cans, bicycles, heck, even many cars look similar once you cover up the logos.

    13. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by chrb · · Score: 5, Informative

      Apple's internal emails apparently show that they copied Sony's designs.

      Found the details. Apple’s iPhone Has Sony Style, Says Samsung (Full Trial Brief). The emails show an iPhone designer being instructed to create a "Sony-like" design, the initial CAD drawings he created even had the Sony logo on. The emails then show the existing iPhone design being abandoned for the new "Sony" design, and the Apple designer has given sworn testimony that his "Sony-style" design changed the course of the project and led to the final iPhone design.

    14. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by Hatta · · Score: 1

      If you have difficulty telling the products apart after covering up the brand logos, then they are too similar. It's that simple.

      Try doing that with beige box PCs from the 90s. Hell, I can barely tell my GF's toyota corolla from the neighbors honda civic.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    15. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by serviscope_minor · · Score: 2

      f you have difficulty telling the products apart after covering up the brand logos, then they are too similar.

      If you place the two side by side, they are clearly different: they have different aspect ratios.

      If they are not side by side, well I couldn't tell which was which between any brands of electrical appliance, and I couldn't reliably tell Ford versus Chevvy either. I can usually spor a Peterbilt because they look cool, but the rest look the same to me. Cat v. Hyundi? also a wash. Nike versus Puma with no logos? nope.

      So what, precisely is your point?

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    16. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by Anubis+IV · · Score: 1

      Not just that, but AllThingsD posted a new story today that expands on yesterday's report (i.e. the Slashdot article) and goes into even more detail on a few aspects. Here's one snippet:

      Samsung was forced to release a bunch of documents it had been keeping under seal that show the likeness between its products and Apple’s. Examples outlined in the documents include comments from Samsung workers discussing similarities with Apple’s products, and reports Samsung got from retailer Best Buy that Samsung tablets were being returned because customers thought they were getting iPads. Samsung still has a pending motion to prevent all of this information from being included at trial.

    17. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      > Samsung made what amounts to a copy of the iPad

      So what?

      We need to get past the idea that copying someone else's work is somehow an inherently bad thing. Copying other people's work is the only way any human progress ever occurs.

      If people aren't allowed to copy each other, then all innovation stops.

      YOU should be forced to use no computing tech newer than a patent monopoly term. You should actually live what you are advocating for the rest of us.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    18. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Cars are the poster children for similar designs.

      My first car quite often got mistaken for it's other branded kin.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    19. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by thsths · · Score: 1

      > There are SO many ways that Samsung could have differentiated their products, but they chose to make it as similar to the iPad as they thought they could get away with. Other manufacturers havn't had any difficulty doing so. There are tablets in various colours, with textured non-slip backs, varying kinds of frontal designs. There were an almost limitless number of ways Samsung could have avoided this right from there start. But they chose not to. And now they're paying the price.

      Exactly. Samsung went into what they knew was a legal grey area. The thing with grey areas is that sometimes you get away with it, but sometimes (especially if you are successful, and you are competing with Apple or Oracle) you do not. I have no sympathy with Samsung whatsoever

    20. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by ilsaloving · · Score: 0

      To pick on just one of your large number of bad examples, if you cover up the 'coke' part of a can of coke, and the 'pepsi' part of a can of pepsi, you're saying people wouldn't be able to tell the can of coke and pepsi apart? The colours and style of each are so different that you would have to be blind to be unable to tell the two apart.

      Meanwhile, there is ONLY one iPad design. Samsung could have done any number of things to clearly differentiate their product from the iPads. But they didn't. They intentionally made their tablets as similar as possible without actually duplicating it right down to the speaker grill. That would be like Coke releasing a new product packaging as Pepsi, but changed one of the swirls so that it curved 10 degrees more. Yes, it's technically different. But you would have to try very hard to convince someone that it wasn't a blatant attempt at copying.

    21. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by ilsaloving · · Score: 1

      And YOU should pay more attention to what the ACTUAL issue is, instead of lining up your own strawmen arguments.

      It's one thing to copy from another. That's how all human progress has occurred. That is not the problem.

      It's a different thing entirely to duplicate someone else's product so exactly that people will accidentally buy the copy, when they intended to buy the original. THAT is what Samsung did, and they are now trying very hard to hide that evidence.

    22. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I liked that decision immensely. Like an elementary school teacher dealing with a kid's quarrell, scolds one and tells him to get off his lazy ass and work harder, then turns around and tells the other to stop whining and apologize for shouting "copycat!"

    23. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      If soda cans could only have one solid color and the expected standard was black. I think we would have trouble telling apart Coke & Pepsi cans.

    24. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by CannonballHead · · Score: 1

      when they intended to buy the original.

      They must have been pretty ignorant. How do you go into a store wanting an APPLE iPad and leaving with a SAMSUNG GALAXY TAB. It doesn't have the same name. It's not made by the same company. It's a different price. It doesn't have that little single circle button. It doesn't have the Apple logo.

    25. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by fzammett · · Score: 3, Interesting

      But we DON'T cover up the brand logos. This, right here, points to the REAL problem:

      PEOPLE DON'T LIKE TO, OR INCAPABLE OF, BASIC THOUGHT.

      If you walk into a Best Buy, and you intend to buy an iPad but you walk out with a Galaxy Tab because you couldn't tell them apart, then you, sir, are a FUCKING IDIOT. If you can't turn them on and tell the difference, you deserve what you get. I mean, what happens? Do you hold them up side-by-side, can't tell them apart, so, what, just fucking randomly pick one?!? Do you not read the damned info cards below them and compare and contrast them? Do you not ask a sales person some questions? I mean, come on already, this is nuts!

      This ISN'T about two admittedly very similarly-designed products (and ok, maybe one is a flat-out copy of the other, I might be willing to stipulate to that) that people can't physically tell apart (And you know what? They're different enough physically anyway that *I* as a not-stupid person, wouldn't be fooled anyway, but I digress). This is about a world full of stupid people that can't be bothered to, you know, GET INFORMATION and make an INFORMED DECISION with it. It's either stupidity or laziness, you're choice (and probably a bit of both). Either you are incapable of basic thought or you just don't like to do it and so when you get "fooled" you get mad because, damn it, SOMEONE should have been PROTECTING YOU from your own fucked-upedness!!

      See, instead of tackling the real problem head-on we want someone to protect us from ourselves. We want the legal system to say "oh no, you can't BOTH have rounded corners because all these GRADE-A FUCKING MORONS out there won't be able to tell them apart and will wind up buying something they didn't want. No, we have to do the thinking FOR them and make sure they don't have to be bothered actually making an informed decision."

      It's utterly ridiculous. If people weren't so God-damned braindead and/or lazy as shit this wouldn't be an issue- even if you legitimately can't physically tell them apart, actually doing some research and actually using them would differentiate them for you quickly if you had half a brain in your head. I am *SO* sick of living in a society of stupid people because this is the kind of bullshit legal wrangling that results. It's inevitable and almost HAS to occur because we're not equipped as a species anymore to have it otherwise.

      It's fucking sad is what it is. Think about the basic situation we find ourselves in here: we have one company that probably did flat-out copy another getting sued by another company who is insecure and afraid to compete on the merits of their products because God forbid the exorbitant profits drop even A LITTLE...

      AND THE LEGAL SYSTEM SAYS THIS IS THE WAY IT SHOULD BE GIVEN THESE CIRCUMSTANCES!

      And it's all because people are too stupid and/or lazy to give us a choice of being otherwise.

      Our best bet at this point is that the Mayans are right and Nibiru or some shit really does collide with the Earth in December... maybe in a few million years we'll crawl out of the primordial ooze again and maybe the next time we'll get it right because we sure as shit aren't getting it right this go-round.

      --
      If a pion (n-) collides with a proton in the woods & noone is there to hear it, does lamdba decay into the source pa
    26. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by ilsaloving · · Score: 1

      Oh come on now... You don't have to mince words. Tell us how you really feel. ;)

    27. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cars are the poster children for similar designs.

      My first car quite often got mistaken for it's other branded kin.

      Sometimes the designs are licensed from one manufacturer to another for cars, motorcycles, lots of things.

      Licensed because you know... They would end up in court like this otherwise. Cars are a really bad example of whatever you guys are trying to prove, that other industries don't care about sniping each other designs. Ha. Hahaha.

    28. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As the summary and article state plainly, Samsung made what amounts to a copy of the iPad. If you have difficulty telling the products apart after covering up the brand logos, then they are too similar. It's that simple.

      Simple and wrong. LCD displays, keyboards, laptops, cardboard boxes, polo shirts, blue jeans, soda cans, bicycles, heck, even many cars look similar once you cover up the logos.

      It would take probably ten minutes to find a cardboard box in your own home with "patent pending" written on it.

      You can find protected designs of all of the above. I'm not sure why you'd even mention clothing, that is obviously wrong, there are designs that companies will go to the bat for.

      Every newly contoured plastic bottle design that comes out is patented or protected by some means, as are wide mouth cans and other features. I thought that would be more obvious because of the TV ads soda companies run bragging about the features. Even the new cardboard boxes soda cans come in for Christs sake, those are well defended. Those slim & really deep boxes of cans were Pepsi or Coke only for a long time if they still aren't.

      Car & motorcycle designs are often licensed from one manufacturer to another, they do this because outright copying would just end badly, like this.

      I don't know why you folks are going to the mat on this, you can find protected designs in every industry, just because you can find some really old public domain ones doesn't mean Apple is doing anything all that strange. They pride themselves for their designs, this is a no brainer.

    29. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The British courts disagree:

      The opinion of British courts means jack shit outside of Britain.

    30. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by MobileTatsu-NJG · · Score: 1

      Someone familiar with the two products could tell easily.

      I have both products, plus an HP Touchpad. I've reached for the Tab thinking it was the iPad and vice-versa. I've never done this with the Touchpad.

      They really are very similar. I've even had iPad-owning-coworkers see my Tab with widgets on the homescreen come by and ask me how I got those to work in iOS. I had to turn it over and show them the Samsung logo for them to see it was an Android tablet and that Apple hadn't gotten around to 'innovating' that feature into their product.

      --

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

    31. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      You're the one that can't see the real issue. You just see some pet brand and you rush to the defense of some corporation that doesn't really need you sticking up for it.

      "ownership" is very destructive here and should be avoided if at all possible.

      Like I said: you should be forced to live in the kind of world you are advocating.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    32. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by theurge14 · · Score: 1

      And earlier Apple designs (even the Apple II) were inspired by Braun. I'm sure if you were to chat with Jony Ives he'd tell you about Dieter Rams and his designs in the 1960s. But "inspired by" doesn't mean make an exact copy.

    33. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by theurge14 · · Score: 1

      After a bit of Google I found this to illustrate my point

    34. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by ilsaloving · · Score: 1

      I just wanted to mention that I've had the privilege of watching a fascinating modding battle that revolved around my post. For those that keep insisting that everyone on Slashdot has the same collective attitude about things, I think this is some excellent evidence to the contrary:

        Why are people obsessing with rounded corners?, posted to Google Warned Samsung Galaxy Tab Was "Too Similar", has been moderated Insightful (+1).

      It is currently scored Normal (2).

      Why are people obsessing with rounded corners?, posted to Google Warned Samsung Galaxy Tab Was "Too Similar", has been moderated Insightful (+1).

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      Why are people obsessing with rounded corners?, posted to Google Warned Samsung Galaxy Tab Was "Too Similar", has been moderated Troll (-1).

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      Why are people obsessing with rounded corners?, posted to Google Warned Samsung Galaxy Tab Was "Too Similar", has been moderated Overrated (-1).

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      Why are people obsessing with rounded corners?, posted to Google Warned Samsung Galaxy Tab Was "Too Similar", has been moderated Insightful (+1).

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      Why are people obsessing with rounded corners?, posted to Google Warned Samsung Galaxy Tab Was "Too Similar", has been moderated Insightful (+1).

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      Why are people obsessing with rounded corners?, posted to Google Warned Samsung Galaxy Tab Was "Too Similar", has been moderated Insightful (+1).

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      Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners?, posted to Google Warned Samsung Galaxy Tab Was "Too Similar", has been moderated Funny (+1).

      It is currently scored Normal (2).

      Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners?, posted to Google Warned Samsung Galaxy Tab Was "Too Similar", has been moderated Interesting (+1).

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      Why are people obsessing with rounded corners?, posted to Google Warned Samsung Galaxy Tab Was "Too Similar", has been moderated Overrated (-1).

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    35. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by ilsaloving · · Score: 1

      .....Wow. You totally have me there. Yup. Wait, no actually you don't.

      Maybe if you stopped painting other people with your own hostility, you'd be able to look at things a little more objectively.

      But please, continue to accuse me of being a mindless fanboi (grrl?), just because I refuse to pander to your nonsensical strawman arguments and black/white worldview.

      Oh hang on, let me put my android phone and windows computer into my closet. Wouldn't want them to get in the way of a good anti-apple rant, now would we?

    36. Re:Why are people obsessing with rounded corners? by macshit · · Score: 1

      LOL! Reminds of when everyone jumped on the "translucent plastic" bandwagon. I recall seeing microwaves, and even irons, in blueberry iMac colours. I was amused.

      That particular look in housewares was popular way before the first imac, in japan at least...

      [I've no doubt the imac's popularity had some effect, but it's pretty likely that retailers could just order existing products that fit the "look"...]

      --
      We live, as we dream -- alone....
  14. They do have a point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To an extent. They are making a device similar to a device that Apple released.
    Keyword being Apple here.
    They sued people for using a logo of an APPLE WITH A BITE out of it when it wasn't even remotely similar.

    Apple are scum. Google was just looking out for another company. (RIP that Google, the new Google saddens me)

    I guess I am glad that they ignored it since all this happened and Apple are being told hard in court for trying to patent nature and basic concepts, which as far as I know are supposed to be illegal with regards to even the US patent system. How the hell these got through are beyond me. Oh, wait, money, never mind.

    1. Re:They do have a point by MickyTheIdiot · · Score: 1

      Before that Apple Records (the company that Beatles founded) sues Apple for name and logo similarity and everyone thought it was ridiculous.

      I think that tolerance of hypocrisy must be central to the modern organizational man's mindset.

    2. Re:They do have a point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Before that Apple Records (the company that Beatles founded) sues Apple for name and logo similarity and everyone thought it was ridiculous.

      I think that tolerance of hypocrisy must be central to the modern organizational man's mindset.

      Those companies (were) in totally different industries, and the settlement reflected that.
      Nobody was shocked or surprised when they were sued again after Apple (Computer) began selling music.

  15. Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by walterbyrd · · Score: 1, Troll

    Apple products are way over-priced, and Apple's "control freakery" is a constant annoyance.

    In terms of features, and performance, Apple often lags behind the competition.

    Then there is the distastfulness of Apple's business practices. In this regard, Apple is worse than Microsoft by miles. From Apple's slave labor, to Apple's lack of environmental concerns, to Apple constant litigious scams.

    1. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So how do you explain that Samsung's hardware costs exactly the same amount of "overprice" as Apple's?

    2. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by Deorus · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Apple products are way over-priced, and Apple's "control freakery" is a constant annoyance.

      Feel free to not buy from them. Other consumers clearly disagree with you, and so does the competition, which is selling products at the same price.

      In terms of features, and performance, Apple often lags behind the competition.

      What competition? What features? What performance?

      Then there is the distastfulness of Apple's business practices. In this regard, Apple is worse than Microsoft by miles. From Apple's slave labor, to Apple's lack of environmental concerns, to Apple constant litigious scams.

      Apple is pretty open about their business practices. What exactly is it that you don't trust about them? You may dislike their business practices, but that doesn't mean they can't be trusted.

      Regarding the rest of your comment, can you provide evidence regarding that slave labor, lack of environmental concerns, and litigious scams you talk about? Do you even know what you're talking about? Are you aware that it has been shown that none of that is actually true? Please provide evidence so that I can provide counter-evidence.

    3. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by jedidiah · · Score: 3, Informative

      Not quite.

      Samsung's alternative options cost HALF of what the Apple version does. That is, I can choose a different set of tradeoffs and spend less. It's rather similar to how I use ION nettops in the place of Mac Minis.

      A diversity of options is nice this way. I get what I want rather than the singular package deal that some monopoly wannabe wants to offer me.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    4. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by cpu6502 · · Score: 1, Interesting

      >>>Other consumers clearly disagree with you

      The average consumer has 8,000 in credit card debt and are therefore really stupid. I do not follow their example of overspending for products I don't need, especially when I can get the same product for much les ($5 cellphone, $15 internet, $23 Dish TV, $15,000 Civic, et cetera).

      >>>and so does the competition, which is selling products at the same price as Apple.

      Not true.
      See my signature.

      --
      My AC stalker: " I personally agree with your posts most of the time, but that won't keep me from modding you troll"
    5. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by cpu6502 · · Score: 1, Informative

      Most things cost half of Apple.
      Not just Macs (see my sig) but phones too. My ISP VirginMobile is selling the iphone 4S for $650, if I recall correctly. The non-apple phone with equivalent function is a mere $200..... 1/3rd the cost. The HTC Evo4 with enhanced functionality (4G; larger screen) is $300.

      --
      My AC stalker: " I personally agree with your posts most of the time, but that won't keep me from modding you troll"
    6. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by scot4875 · · Score: 2

      which is selling products at the same price.

      This is disingenuous, because it says nothing about what you're actually *buying* for that price. If an iPad is $500 worth of hardware in a $700 package, and a Galaxy Tab is $600 worth of hardware in a $700 package, then it really doesn't matter that they're the same price; the Galaxy Tab is the better deal, all other things considered.

      But then, IMO, anyone spending $500+ on a toy that's going to be mostly collecting dust and then worthless in a year or two is a moron IMO. Google finally got the price point right with the Nexus tablet.

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    7. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by quacking+duck · · Score: 1

      >>>and so does the competition, which is selling products at the same price as Apple.

      Not true.
      See my signature [Bought an i7-equipped PC for $650. An equal-speced MacMini costs almost double that. :-o].

      I'm curious what make/model you bought, or what parts and components you used if you built it yourself.

      One of the appeals of the Mini (maybe not to you, though) is its small size. In this discussion they were having a hard time finding Mac mini-sized, fan-less PCs that weren't crippled with slower CPUs or graphics. Admittedly Apple cheated a bit by excluding a built-in optical drive.

    8. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 0

      Yeah Apple hardware is soooo boring.

      Android has all sorts of fun interesting things like mutli touch bugs (http://androinica.com/2011/12/galaxy-nexus-owners-experiencing-multi-touch-issues-ics-to-blame/) and screen separation issues (http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1781237&page=73) which you get to fix all by yourself.

      Face it, Android is low budget shit. It's no surprise, Google only cares that it works well enough for them to get all your personal data and track you.

    9. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by Nixoloco · · Score: 1

      >>>Apple products are way over-priced

      Indeed. Look at my sig:

      Was it the same form factor?

      And why is that worthy of putting in a sig? I mean congratulations on your accomplishment. I'm sure I could custom build an i-7 equipped PC for cheaper than whatever one you bought.

    10. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by MobileTatsu-NJG · · Score: 1

      What are the dimensions of your PC? I'm looking for a small one I can put next to my TV.

      --

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

    11. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by cpu6502 · · Score: 1

      Well I tried to find a "normal" sized Mac, but those cost over $2000! Th bottom line is that the HP Pavilion or Dell XPS desktops were much much less money. They also come installed with Windows so I don't have to deal with the hassle of trying to make MS Visio run on OS 10.7 and do work from home.

      --
      My AC stalker: " I personally agree with your posts most of the time, but that won't keep me from modding you troll"
    12. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by Dixie_Flatline · · Score: 2

      Having the same specs is not the same as being equally functional. For one thing, you don't get OS X on a PC. Clearly that doesn't matter to you, but it does matter to some people.

      Have you factored in resale value? For whatever reason, Apple products retain a great deal of value. I've always partially funded my new computer purchases with selling my old Apple hardware. I can get 30-40% of the purchase price of a new machine if I sell something 3 years old. So the fact that the new price is double isn't actually true if you're willing to sell after you feel that you're done with it.

      Reliability? Tech support? Maybe you don't need them, but other people do. Apple's tech support consistently ranks at the top of the lists year after year.

      Sure, the SPECS are the same, but I'm not convinced that the VALUE is the same.

    13. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by teg · · Score: 1

      which is selling products at the same price.

      This is disingenuous, because it says nothing about what you're actually *buying* for that price. If an iPad is $500 worth of hardware in a $700 package, and a Galaxy Tab is $600 worth of hardware in a $700 package, then it really doesn't matter that they're the same price; the Galaxy Tab is the better deal, all other things considered.

      I disagree on that one... the better deal is what gives you the best experience, and fits best with your needs. Things like software, future software upgrades, software ecosystem, support etc don't show up in hardware costs either, but might have a large effect on my experience with the unit the next couple of years.

    14. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by tcr · · Score: 1

      If it wasn't for that "low budget shit", you would still have a half-assed notification system. Stop pretending it isn't a two way street. Competition pressures the vendors and benefits the consumers. This is great for everyone, except dumbass fanbois.

      --


      Information wants to be beer.
    15. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by Deorus · · Score: 1

      The average consumer has 8,000 in credit card debt and are therefore really stupid. I do not follow their example of overspending for products I don't need, especially when I can get the same product for much les ($5 cellphone, $15 internet, $23 Dish TV, $15,000 Civic, et cetera).

      The same product? Just because you choose the cheap, bottom-line stuff, doesn't mean that's ideal for everybody, or that the more expensive products aren't actually superior. Your standards are not everybody's standards, and if I extend this example to your laptop example I can already tell that you've made a lot of compromises on your choice (such as screen quality, construction quality, battery life, graphics processor, heat dissipation, RAM, keyboard, touchpad, etc.). I'm fine with people wasting money wisely and compromising when they feel that they can live without certain features; I am, however, not fine with people telling others that the only way to live is by their standards. To Apple you are not target audience, it's that simple. Jobs made that perfectly clear when he stated that he did not know of a way to make a computer that cost $500 and was not a piece of junk.

      Yesterday I gave my sister a $300 netbook. By my standards what I bought was a piece of crap, but since all she does with it is to browse the web and watch Youtube videos from time to time, it served the purpose of replacing her 8 year old HP perfectly. That doesn't mean I consider my MacBook Pro, which was 6 times as expensive, to be overpriced -- it's my only computer, I don't need anything else, it runs everything including current-gen games, serves as a desktop connected to a Thunderbolt Display, and comes with me wherever I go.

    16. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by Deorus · · Score: 1

      This is disingenuous, because it says nothing about what you're actually *buying* for that price. If an iPad is $500 worth of hardware in a $700 package, and a Galaxy Tab is $600 worth of hardware in a $700 package, then it really doesn't matter that they're the same price; the Galaxy Tab is the better deal, all other things considered.

      Can you name a reason for people to care about actual hardware when iOS is known to perform much better and be a lot more responsive than Android? Why should a user care about purchasing a product with better hardware specs when it actually performs worse than the competition? And this is not to mention a very specific detail about the hardware that you seem to be ignoring: the A5X completely destroys the Tegra in OpenGL benchmarks while being owned on the CPU performance. One question you have to ask here is: what is the CPU actually being used for in the tablet? Even on the desktop, where you actually perform CPU-intensive tasks, CPU performance has been losing relevance, so why would that be such a big deal on a tablet? The only logical explanation I see for adding extra CPU to an appliance that really doesn't need it is because the firmware is too slow, but then you are compensating in an area for the shortcomings of another, which should be part of your consideration!

    17. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by cheesybagel · · Score: 1

      I keep hearing that crap about resale value but most of my interactions with Mac users nearly inevitably end with them trying to offload their old hardware on me (plus anyone else which is nearby) and everyone rejecting it. It does not matter which label is on it hardware prices devalue like a rock once they get obsoleted.

    18. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by Pieroxy · · Score: 2

      Do you mean to compare a subsidized HTC Evo 4G to an unsubsidized iPhone 4S without even talking about the rest of the cost?

      It looks to me as if the EVO 4G is $599.99 instead of your $300 which makes it a heck of a lot closer to the Apple 4 that is only only 519€ unlocked in France (couldn't find a price unlocked in the US).

      Don't forget most reviews did give the upper hand to the iPhone 4 vs the EVO 4G so comparing it with an iPhone 4S is probably a bit of a stretch.

      Geez, and they say Apple users are fanbois...

    19. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by Pieroxy · · Score: 1

      Well I tried to find a "normal" sized Mac, but those cost over $2000!

      Are you trying to say that you prefer big computers for the only sake of them being big? Are you a pervert or something?

    20. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

      Just to note, I'm not a fanboy. In fact I've never owned an iphone but I am an Android owner since the release of the G1 and I'm well aware of how meh it's been. I'm sure it's better now and if I decide I need a tablet I'll consider Android but only because I can't see myself needing a tablet enough to pay Apple's prices. Otherwise the ipad is without a doubt a better all around piece of hardware and no it's not really good for everyone because both side are definitely guilty of fighting over patents.

      The best thing that could happen to consumers is the US patent office sorts itself out.

    21. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by Tough+Love · · Score: 1

      Do you mean to compare a subsidized HTC Evo 4G to an unsubsidized iPhone 4S without even talking about the rest of the cost? It looks to me as if the EVO 4G is $599.99 instead of your $300 which makes it a heck of a lot closer to the Apple 4 that is only only 519€ unlocked in France (couldn't find a price unlocked in the US).

      Unlocked HTC Evo 4G... Our Price: $297.

      As of right now your price for the Apple phone is UER 519 which is $639 USD versus $297 for the Samsung just as GP said. Moral of the story: never accept any claim by an Apple fan at face value. Second moral of the story: a Best Buy link is always a red flag.

      --
      When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
    22. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 1

      Second moral of the story: a Best Buy link is always a red flag.

      The kind of shopper who frequents an Apple Store is likely the kind who wouldn't blink at going to Best Buy either.

    23. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      Or if we compare local prices to local prices. In my country the cheapest I've seen a 16GB iPhone 4S is $799 whereas the cheapest I've seen the 16GB Galaxy S3 (evo 4g not sold locally) which has better specs is $549

      Also if the cheapest price you can find on the EVO 4G is $599 unlocked and out of contract you're not looking very hard.

      Yep fanbois indeed. But sure lets compare Euros to USD because the Euro crashed vs the USD whereas the prices haven't changed which makes our arguments sooo more valid.... /sarcasm.

    24. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by Pieroxy · · Score: 1

      At least, I provided links. You provided nothing but blank assertions that you're right. I'm convinced now.

    25. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by Pieroxy · · Score: 1

      I'm not American so I don't know the good places to buy stuff there. I stand corrected.

      That said, the iPhone 4 is 549 CAD which is about 549 USD these days.

    26. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by makomk · · Score: 1

      Was it the same form factor?

      Does every customer want the exact form factor that Apple provides and only that form factor?

    27. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by cpu6502 · · Score: 1

      >>>For one thing, you don't get OS X on a PC. Clearly that doesn't matter to you, but it does matter to some people.

      It does indeed. I was just reading on ars technica about 10.7 and how it wouldn't talk over wifi. According to the article it took Apple three tries to finally fix the problem (10.7.3 release). That is piss poor.

      So why on earth would I want to use that OS? It's no better than Windoze. And also Apple OSes get obsoleted in 3-4 years, whereas XP was supported for 10 years (until IE9 was released).

      --
      My AC stalker: " I personally agree with your posts most of the time, but that won't keep me from modding you troll"
    28. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by cpu6502 · · Score: 1

      >>> To Apple you are not target audience, it's that simple.

      No I'm not.
      Neither are most of us.
      So stop trying to ram the Mac down our throat and saying it's the only computer we should buy (or worse: that we were stupid to buy a Windows PC). I and the rest of us are not interesting in your Apple Bible-thumping.

      --
      My AC stalker: " I personally agree with your posts most of the time, but that won't keep me from modding you troll"
    29. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by cpu6502 · · Score: 1

      P.S. A friend gave me his old G3 and G4 for free back in 1999. The G3 had OS 10.2 which was hopelessly out of date (could only run IE5 and Safari 1). The G4 I installed 10.5 which worked but was slow-as-snails. So I sold both on ebay.

      They went for $40 plus shipping. Equal to how much I got for my Win98 laptop one week earlier. So much for resale value and the "Macs hold prices better" falsehood. 10.5 is only about half as old as Win98, but it still only drew the price.

      --
      My AC stalker: " I personally agree with your posts most of the time, but that won't keep me from modding you troll"
    30. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by cpu6502 · · Score: 1

      >>>Do you mean to compare a subsidized HTC Evo 4G to an unsubsidized iPhone 4S

      No dipshit.
      Strawman argument.
      Inserting words in my mouth!

      I never said the HTC Evo 4 was subsidized. Pay-as-you-go, no contract VirginMobile does not subsidize its phones (and you should have known that dumbass). It costs $300 and is more advanced then the $650 iphone 4S.

      --
      My AC stalker: " I personally agree with your posts most of the time, but that won't keep me from modding you troll"
    31. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by cpu6502 · · Score: 1

      >>>why is that worthy of putting in a sig? I mean congratulations on your accomplishment. I'm sure I could custom build an i-7 equipped PC for cheaper than whatever one you bought.

      Is that an offer? If you can build an i7 PC with Windows7 installed and 8GB of RAM plus 1TB drive for $500 shipped, I'll buy it from you.
      What's that?
      You CAN'T build it for that cheap? Oh okay. Well then stop talking trash. (And stop defending Apple; there's no reason an equal-spec Mac should cost ~$1250 shipped.)

      --
      My AC stalker: " I personally agree with your posts most of the time, but that won't keep me from modding you troll"
    32. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by Nixoloco · · Score: 1

      Was it the same form factor?

      Does every customer want the exact form factor that Apple provides and only that form factor?

      Point was that form factor is a consideration people make when valuing something. That you can build something with better specs but different (much larger) form factor is not necessarily an equivalent value.

    33. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by Grudge2012 · · Score: 0

      Do you mean to compare a subsidized HTC Evo 4G to an unsubsidized iPhone 4S without even talking about the rest of the cost? It looks to me as if the EVO 4G is $599.99 instead of your $300 which makes it a heck of a lot closer to the Apple 4 that is only only 519€ unlocked in France (couldn't find a price unlocked in the US).

      Unlocked HTC Evo 4G... Our Price: $297.

      As of right now your price for the Apple phone is UER 519 which is $639 USD versus $297 for the Samsung just as GP said. Moral of the story: never accept any claim by an Apple fan at face value. Second moral of the story: a Best Buy link is always a red flag.

      No, the moral of the story is that Fandroids will stoop as low as to link to some shady site just to prove how damn cheap they could get their phone - not that they would actually buy them there themselves.

      The best reviews for zwee.com say you get your money back after they can't ship for a couple of weeks.

    34. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      Is it that hard to go to store.apple.com, and type Galaxy S3 into Google? You must be a member of generation spoonfed.

      Your links are worthless and above all actually argue against your case when you consider 6 months ago the Euro was getting closer to being double the value of the USD.

      And if you need a link to that source then god help you.

    35. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by Pieroxy · · Score: 1

      You're putting the discussion in your fucking country without even saying what country it is! How is that for sheer stupidity! How do you expect anyone to make anything out of your post?

    36. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by cpu6502 · · Score: 1

      >>>Do you mean to compare a subsidized HTC Evo 4G to an unsubsidized iPhone 4S without even talking about the rest of the cost? It looks to me as if the EVO 4G is $599.99 instead of your $300..... Geez, and they say Apple users are fanbois...

      Fuck you to fucking hell you damn Limey britsih ciock. RIGHT HERE: VirginMobile UNSUBSIDIZED PHOEN. http://www.virginmobileusa.com/shop/cell-phones/htc-evo-phone/features/ You stupid twit. Now wonder you lost your empire you painsy-assed git . Go run past the Oympics rifle range and get yourself shot

      --
      My AC stalker: " I personally agree with your posts most of the time, but that won't keep me from modding you troll"
    37. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by Pieroxy · · Score: 1

      >>>Do you mean to compare a subsidized HTC Evo 4G to an unsubsidized iPhone 4S without even talking about the rest of the cost? It looks to me as if the EVO 4G is $599.99 instead of your $300..... Geez, and they say Apple users are fanbois...

      Fuck you to fucking hell you damn Limey britsih ciock. RIGHT HERE: VirginMobile UNSUBSIDIZED PHOEN. http://www.virginmobileusa.com/shop/cell-phones/htc-evo-phone/features/ You stupid twit. Now wonder you lost your empire you painsy-assed git . Go run past the Oympics rifle range and get yourself shot

      Thank you. Have a nice day.

    38. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No dipshit.

      Strawman argument.

      Inserting words in my mouth!

      Oh really? Lets take a look at the facts then, shall we?

      You claimed that the HTC Evo 4G was $300, and provided no citation for that.

      Pieroxy claimed that the HTC Evo 4G was $600, and gave you a fucking citation by linking to the actual product on Bestbuy's website.

      Considering how, instead of providing a citation for your $300 price, you resorted to child-like name-calling when presented with a $600 price citation, I suspect that when you double-checked, you noticed that $300 really was a subsidized price, and you are now trying to save face.

      I'm sorry, but it seems the "dipshit" here is you.

    39. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Care to post a link to the story? "It wouldn't talk over wifi" is a rather ambiguous statement, and I would love to know in what context your particular story meant it. But until you can provide a citation, we shall consider your wild accusation to be nothing more than a lie. I mean, it's only fair, you treat everyone else the same, so why should we trust your word for something?

    40. Re:Lots of good reasons not to buy Apple by Dixie_Flatline · · Score: 1

      This is many days old, but I'm just checking my comment reply backlog now.

      In any case, your anecdotal experience is evidence of nothing much at all. For all I know, you put the machines on eBay with a starting bid of $1. Even if it's true that you only got $40+shipping, it doesn't indicate much to me.

      Also, I said machines about 3 years old, not 8-10 years old. At that point, they're not terribly useful machines, I agree. But a 1 year old PC won't sell for as much as a 1 year old Mac. There is presumably a point of convergence (and then a new point of divergence as things become vintage, or someone is willing to pay to keep parts around to repair their old machines) after a number of years.

      Anyway, it's very nice that you hate Apple so much, but none of what you say is terribly damning or relevant to my point. You've still not convinced me or even put forth a very meaningful argument that Apple computers have less value for the same specification (to most people). I'm willing to include that parenthetical caveat because some people just want a bare-bones PC with nothing on it. When I buy a Mac, I want XCode and iPhoto and the iWork suite and all those other things that come packaged with the machine. Those are part of the value for me. Maybe not you, fair enough.

      Lastly, I had no wifi problems with 10.7 on my iMac, and I upgraded on day 1. There was definitely an issue with some machines, but it was hardly like the entire Mac population lost wifi internet simultaneously when they upgraded. Operating systems have bugs. Even Linux and FreeBSD systems.

  16. Hey guys, guess what? by JustAnotherIdiot · · Score: 1

    Wacom has been releasing "tablets" long before both the ipad and the galaxy existed, should it start suing too?

    --
    What do I know, I'm just an idiot, right?
    1. Re:Hey guys, guess what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've owned several Wacom products and no, they did not create something equivalent to the iPad. I'm a software engineer like many other readers of slashdot. Anyone could have put all the pieces together to create a great consumer tablet for surfing the web, watching movies and playing games. To all those idiots who think "it's so simple" you failed. If you had invented the iPad, you'd be rich right now. I wish I had the skills, aesthetics, experience and time to create the iPad, but the reality is no most people don't have "what it takes." Copying on the otherhand is much simpler. Who cares that they spent billions sweating the details to make a user friendly product. All those geektards out there screaming "I could have done it." You're wrong, you didn't and can't.

    2. Re:Hey guys, guess what? by JustAnotherIdiot · · Score: 1

      I've owned several Wacom products and no, they did not create something equivalent to the iPad.

      In terms of OS and such? No.
      In terms of "a rectangle shaped tablet with rounded corners"? Hell yeah they did. That's every single one of their products.

      --
      What do I know, I'm just an idiot, right?
  17. My Mac sucks! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    I don't want to start a holy war here, but what is the deal with you Mac fanatics? I've been sitting here at my freelance gig in front of a Mac (a 8600/300 w/64 Megs of RAM) for about 20 minutes now while it attempts to copy a 17 Meg file from one folder on the hard drive to another folder. 20 minutes. At home, on my Pentium Pro 200 running NT 4, which by all standards should be a lot slower than this Mac, the same operation would take about 2 minutes. If that.

    In addition, during this file transfer, Netscape will not work. And everything else has ground to a halt. Even BBEdit Lite is straining to keep up as I type this.

    I won't bore you with the laundry list of other problems that I've encountered while working on various Macs, but suffice it to say there have been many, not the least of which is I've never seen a Mac that has run faster than its Wintel counterpart, despite the Macs' faster chip architecture. My 486/66 with 8 megs of ram runs faster than this 300 mhz machine at times. From a productivity standpoint, I don't get how people can claim that the Macintosh is a superior machine.

    Mac addicts, flame me if you'd like, but I'd rather hear some intelligent reasons why anyone would choose to use a Mac over other faster, cheaper, more stable systems.

    1. Re:My Mac sucks! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      my god, somebody reached back into the 1990s for that copypasta.

    2. Re:My Mac sucks! by AngryDeuce · · Score: 2

      I remember the first time I did acid, too.

    3. Re:My Mac sucks! by DM9290 · · Score: 0

      Mac addicts, flame me if you'd like, but I'd rather hear some intelligent reasons why anyone would choose to use a Mac over other faster, cheaper, more stable systems.

      Flame me if you'd like but I'd rather hear some intelligent arguments based on CURRENT product lines, not from 15 years ago because if that's where you are going, my Amiga 4000 could beat your pentium and your mac.

      --
      No one has a right to their *own* opinion. They have a right to the TRUTH.
    4. Re:My Mac sucks! by cheesybagel · · Score: 1

      Actually the first time I used a Mac (a Quadra running System 7) I crashed it. Then I saw an iMac running MacOS X and... I crashed that as well. It took less than 2 minutes.

    5. Re:My Mac sucks! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Get with the times, fool. We're talking about TABLETS, the Newton is far superior to any of that Windows CE garbage.

    6. Re:My Mac sucks! by Tough+Love · · Score: 1

      I've been sitting here at my freelance gig in front of a Mac (a 8600/300 w/64 Megs of RAM) for about 20 minutes now while it attempts to copy a 17 Meg file from one folder on the hard drive to another folder. 20 minutes. At home, on my Pentium Pro 200 running NT 4, which by all standards should be a lot slower than this Mac, the same operation would take about 2 minutes. If that.

      A Linux box of that vintage can do the job in less than two seconds. No exaggeration. I have a PPro Linux box of that vintage still running. It can transfer over IDE (the grotty old ribbon cable standard) at a steady 50 MB/Sec. I assume the files are on the same disk otherwise Linux can do the read and write in parallel, even on IDE (provided the disks are on separate IDE controllers, which they should be, those machines always have two IDE controllers). Allow a second for some fragmention. Result: file copy is finished well under two seconds.

      Please bear in mind that living all your life in a Microsoft coccoon may be hazardous to your awareness of what your hardware is really capable of.

      --
      When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
    7. Re:My Mac sucks! by jrumney · · Score: 1

      Copying from the command line is fast on both DOS and Linux (and I presume OS X, though I don't know about older generation MacOS - did it even have a command line, or was it just AppleScript driving the GUI?). But on all platforms these days copy from the GUI is extremely slow. It didn't used to be on Linux, but spending far too many CPU and GPU cycles on calculating estimated times and displaying animations for a trivial operation seems to be one of the misfeatures that GNOME 3 and Unity have decided to copy from Windows and OS X.

  18. Competition by ReallyEvilCanine · · Score: 0

    How about Apple, Samsung, Google and the rest of them SHUT THE FUCK UP and just compete on features & abilities? I'm sick of this soap opera and even sicker of the technology stifling they're ALL trying to do while complaining that the rest of them are doing it.

    1. Re:Competition by Dixie_Flatline · · Score: 1

      Because people look at things. People decide a lot of things based on aesthetics. And because this isn't just about a rectangle with rounded corners as the headlines here would have you believe, there is value in an aesthetic design that guides you using familiar cues and particular design elements.

      Designing something that is both functional and aesthetic is not trivial. We see examples of bad design all the time. I can give you an incredibly powerful computer, but it's trivial for me to make the interface so pathological that you can't get anything done. Even if I'm not trying to trip you up, I can definitely make an interface that doesn't let you use the full power of the computer that you're at. When you're talking about interfaces, the form IS the function.

      ONE of Apple's features and strengths has long been its design sense. It's an important part of their marketing, and it's an important part of their design in the sense that they believe that they can make a device more usable and inviting with the right effort applied to the creation of the interface.

      Is that something patentable? Well, I don't know. But it seems to me that patents are there so you can (temporarily) have a monopoly on a good idea, to encourage people to come up with good ideas and make some money off of them. If Apple's UI and iPad design, TAKEN AS A WHOLE, are a superior functional experience, I think it fits the bill.

    2. Re:Competition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Samsung Galaxy (both) nor the S series do not "aesthetically" look or feel ANYTHING like the iPads and iPhones. If people are confused by these, then I would argue that EVERY tablet out there makes people wonder "Oh, is that an iPad" from 10 feet away but only cause the general US public doesn't know there are other options.

  19. All products are similar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All of the products are similer, this is kind of trend.

    Samsung galaxy s3 is the best now.

  20. Welcome to Patent Law by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    This is all happening because a patent law puts the onus of enforcement on the company or individual who owns the patent. Apple has patents on the way things look as well as the technology itself. So to protect those patents they have to file lawsuits. Samsung's stuff just happens to look too much like Apple's. So to protect those patents that were granted to them, they have to sue. They're not being evil or nasty, they're just protecting their rights under existing patent law. I agree that patent law in this country needs to be revamped, but until it is, this is what you get.

    1. Re:Welcome to Patent Law by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And before everyone starts yelling about this other smaller company did it and never got sued, think about it this way: would you rather that Apple sued a huge company like Samsung that can afford to lose the suit and pay for the lawyers, or a smaller company that would be destroyed by a suit like this if they lost?

    2. Re:Welcome to Patent Law by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope, you're mistaking patents and trademarks. With patents, unlike trademarks, you don't _have_ to protect it or lose it, you _may choose_ to. So, to answer:

      > would you rather that Apple sued a huge company like Samsung that can afford to lose the suit and pay for the lawyers, or a smaller company that would be destroyed by a suit like this if they lost?

      I would rather Apple redirected money they waste on lawyers to stop competition to the engineers, made a licensing deal with Samsung on those patents and finally released iPhone 5. That would be for the best of all.

  21. Re:So they look alike. It's called "form factor." by cyber-vandal · · Score: 5, Informative

    Apart from LG who announced this blatant iPhone ripoff in December 2006, a month before the first iPhone was announced.

  22. Re:So they look alike. It's called "form factor." by cyber-vandal · · Score: 1

    And this one looks quite similar too.

  23. Re:So they look alike. It's called "form factor." by jxander · · Score: 1

    So, when can we expect the lawsuit to start flying between Ford, Chevy, Toyota, Kia, etc? take off all the badges and I'd have a tough time telling apart every generic 4-door sedan from the others.

    --
    This signature is false.
  24. Re:So they look alike. It's called "form factor." by BSDimwit · · Score: 1

    I think the patent has run out on the coffee tureen by now. However, I can see your point about similar products having a similar design, but Samsung took this to the extreme. Apple hasn't sued Motorola over the the Xoom's appearance because while similar in form factor, it didn't take practically every major design cue from Apple like the Galaxy did.... hell, even the packaging and power brick look the same. If you think that there should be no such thing as design patents, fine, argue that, but it's plain that Samsung copied Apple in this case.

  25. Re:So they look alike. It's called "form factor." by dAzED1 · · Score: 2
    the palm pilot of 1996? Tech that wasn't driven or designed by apple improved, allowing for more features. Blackberry had a touchscreen square thingy before the iphone, too. Unless you're really just talking about the rounded edges, which...that's just design in general, and is a fad thing. Look at cars - they go from sharp lines, to rounded features, back to sharp lines, back to rounded features...oscillates every couple decades. Look at the corvette in particular - started round, then a few years later went to start lines, then back to round with the stingray, then back to straight lines with the 80's...

    You're not really so much of an apple fanboi that the idea of rounded edges is something you really attribute to apple, are you?

  26. How many clamshell phone designs are there? by mveloso · · Score: 2

    If you look at e clamshell phones, how many look like the razr? One.

    How about the candy bar phones? They look similar, but different no manufacturer wants users to confuse their phones with someone elses.

    Look at Samsung. They want their stuff to look like Apple's because it helps them sell. Period. In the documents they say as much.

    People here freak out when a developer copies another developer's game...but when Samsung and google copy Apple people are like "oh, there's only one way to do it so we have to copy apple."

    How fucking lame is that?

    1. Re:How many clamshell phone designs are there? by scot4875 · · Score: 1

      People here freak out when a developer copies another developer's game.

      And, note, it's perfectly legal for them to do so.

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
  27. Re:So they look alike. It's called "form factor." by pcolaman · · Score: 2

    Kenmore appliances are just rebranded appliances made by other manufacturers, including LG. That Kenmore washing machine looks like an LG and vice versa because very likely they are the same model with some slight enhancements.

  28. What about cars? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So how come there are thousands of cars on the market that look simmillar to eachother, have all the same basic features, a lot of the same add on features, advertise the same things and so but no one ever sues anyone for copying "the car design"? Hell some newer cars I couldnt tell apart if it werent for logos on them just like some phones and tablets.

    Apple are just assholes that are afraid of competition. They are afraid people will realize that you can buy other brand versions of the iphone, the ipad and the ipod that do the same thing for a lot less money.

  29. Re:So they look alike. It's called "form factor." by jedidiah · · Score: 1

    That's like saying that the first guy to ever make a mass market color TV invented color television.

    Of course the capacity to do something greatly preceeded the technology to make it into an affordable consumer product.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  30. Re:So they look alike. It's called "form factor." by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    > Apple hasn't sued Motorola over the the Xoom's appearance

    Rewriting history much?

  31. Re:So they look alike. It's called "form factor." by forand · · Score: 1

    The difference between the examples you mention and the issue being discussed here is that Apple has a broad design patent on the similar products while the products you mention are under no such patent. You can think that such a patent is overly broad, a complete farce of the patent system, or pretty much anything else but it doesn't matter in terms of the law. As another poster pointed out Samsung has clearly used Apple products, which have design patents on their design, as inspiration for their offerings. While I think Samsung should be trying to show how such patents are bunk they are trying to claim that they didn't do this at all which is just not reasonable when you look at their offerings. The problem here lies in the patent system which allows overly broad design patents which can be used to stifle innovation.

  32. Re:So they look alike. It's called "form factor." by Antarius · · Score: 2

    But they did.

    From TFA: http://allthingsd.com/files/2012/07/samsung_designs.jpg

    You'll see there that, prior to the announcement of the iphone, Samsung had produce many bar-touchscreen designs. The iphone is similar to some of them, (since they were first), while some are more obviously just ancestors of the Galaxy S. Models like the Slide and F700 (of which I had one, prior to the announcement of the iphone) very obviously evolved into the Galaxy S.


    A great comparison is the car market. In Australia, there are arguments amongst car enthusiasts (see: Bogans) about which is better between the (Ford) Falcon and the (Holden) Commodore. Both 'camps' are just as one-eyed and ranting mad as the Apple vs Samsung camps. (And in both situations, I look at them and think "WTF? It's just a car/phone" and get a completely different brand so that I don't have to be tarred with the same brush. (Hell, I'm using a frickin' SONY atm to avoid those two!

    In the late 70s and early 80s, both the Falcon/Fairmont and the Commodore/Calais had the typical 'boxy' look of a 70s car.

    Suddenly 1988 came around and both companies took the evolutionary process of gasp Rounding the corners! at the same time, with the 1988 Falcon and Commodore getting the same rounded, streamlined look.

    I'm sorry, but while I still have a deep-seated sympathy for Apple from the days when they were the underdog vs MS, in this case they are abusing process and being vexatious over a very logical and common design evolution.

  33. Re:So they look alike. It's called "form factor." by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Who the fuck modded this "Insightful?"

    Insightful doesn't mean "I agree/I like Apple." There's nothing insightful about a bigoted, biased and factually incorrect statement.

  34. Re:So they look alike. It's called "form factor." by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Speaking only about exterior desing, here's a Samsung phone presented Feb 2007, one month later than iPhone. If Samsung managed to rip it off and produce prototypes in a month, it's pretty damn impressive.

    Or there is a simple reason for this design:

    The touchscreen allows to control the entire handset. The "Croix UI" was awarded the iF Communication Design Award for 2007.[3]

    Switching to completely touchscreen-based controls naturally leads to this look. "It's design genius of Steve Jobs and Johnatan Ive!", my ass.

  35. Not Really by zifn4b · · Score: 4, Informative

    That's the beautiful thing about capitalism and the free market.

    The peasantry is in control rather than a few Robber Barons.

    With all due respect, you are just flat wrong. Laissez-faire Capitalism puts control primarily in the hands of the people who have the wealth (AKA "capital"). I assume you are referring to the United States. In this country the "peasantry" doesn't have much of a voice because we do not have a real democracy. Some may say we have a Republic but I think it's closer to an Oligarchy at this point. Here the most wealthy 1% control 35.6% of the wealth while the top 10% control 75% of it. The Forbes Top 400 has a combined wealth of $1.37 trillion dollars. That's who is primarily in control not the "peasantry".

    --
    We'll make great pets
    1. Re:Not Really by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      I said the free market, not the Mad Max approach to economic policy.

      Of course total lawlessness is going to benefit the biggest bully.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    2. Re:Not Really by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      free market != laissez-faire

    3. Re:Not Really by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      those stats are only worrisome if all of that wealth was created by the 'peasants'. But its not, so who gives a shit?

  36. Etch-a-sketch looked similar. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So did the (non infringing for unknown reasons) prior art that Apple included.

    However, since the patent didn't explain why the similarities of the tablet and the prior art were not infringing but different enough not to be compared, there was no way of finding out whether the Galaxy tablet was similar in an infringing way like it iPad or non-infringing way like the prior art example or etch-a-sketch.

  37. Re:So they look alike. It's called "form factor." by gnasher719 · · Score: 1

    It also looks like ones I've seen from Peets, from Jittery Joes, and from McDonalds. My point is that there's only so many ways to make a coffee mug.

    Among the idiotic things posted here, this is among the more idiotic ones. There are collectors who have thousands of totally different coffee mugs.

  38. Re:So they look alike. It's called "form factor." by tooyoung · · Score: 3, Informative

    Which doesn't really look that similar to the first generation iPhone apart from the fact that it is a rectangular touch screen phone. It doesn't have a curved metal back like the first gen-iPhone, doesn't have similar side buttons, doesn't have a similar front panel design. The side and back appearance of the two phones are night and day different. The experience when turning on and interacting with the device is not similar to the iPhone.

    Of course, you're insinuating that Apple scrambled with one month before announcement and redid their entire design to rip off the Prada, which I'm taking from you involves redoing the iPhone to be a touch screen based product. And, of course, this was a blatant copy, but LG never bothered to sue.

    Although it is an oft repeated meme on slashdot, Apple did not sue over a curved rectangular design. I know that you've read that here a number of times in highly moderated comments, but that doesn't make it the case. I also know that you've read a number of times that the iPhone was ripped off from the LG Prada, but if you look at front, back, and side profiles, plus screen shots of the GUI, it will be obvious that this wasn't the case.

    What Apple sued Samsung for was the fact that the Galaxy lineup copied the iPhone experience as a whole - the appearance of the device beyond a simple front profile, the user interactions, the general feel of screen layouts and icons. Any of these items on their own wouldn't be worth suing over. It is the combination of all of these elements together to create a user experience that is essentially identical to the iPhone that Apple is suing over.

    Of course, why wouldn't you make a comment about the iPhone copying the Prada, or Apple suing Samsung over black rounded rectangles? The first visible comment in any story mentioning these items is guaranteed a +5 mod.

  39. Re:So they look alike. It's called "form factor." by squiggleslash · · Score: 1

    Kenmore just rebadges stuff (they're the Sears house brand, it's not like Sears is going to build factories for appliances anywhere.) We have an LG fridge that's been rebadged as a Kenmore for example. That said, your point over all stands ;-)

    --
    You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
  40. I'd be interested in an exact quote of the warning by tlambert · · Score: 1

    Perhaps it was something along the lines of "That product is too similar because they are litigious assholes; they will go after anyone who manufactures anything that is vaguely parallelepiped shaped whose corners won't poke your eye out".

  41. too funny by josepha48 · · Score: 1

    So actually if you look at some of the patents that are flying around and being thrown at each other they actually all have been invented in some fashion or other before. I look at Palm. Palm had a phone that had icons that were laid out on the screen and auto arranged. This was one of apples claims against samsung and google. Palm had the 4 icons at the bottom of the touch screen before either of those two clowns did and the Treo was a phone with that feature first. Apple's suit over 'trade dress' is well silly. Yes Samsung is wrong in making it look so similar, but really is anyone that stupid that they would by a product from Samsung and think that it is an Apple ipad? The Samsung devices to not have the Apple logo on them anywhere. Dumb idea on Samsung's part? Yes, but Apple is going after everyone like Apple invented the smartphone and the tablet. Nokia actually had a tablet out for sale before Apple. It had rounded corners and they played with different designs. I just cannot believe Apple is doing what they are doing. They are going after the competition via law suits. This sounds just like Microsoft going after Linux years ago as well as SCO going after Linux years ago. Lots of FUD.

    --

    Only 'flamers' flame!

  42. Re:So they look alike. It's called "form factor." by not+flu · · Score: 2
    Night and day difference between the designs? I see a big screen with most of the buttons on the sides along with connectors and the camera at the top back corner. They look virtually identical to me (I have an iPhone).

    Of course, you're insinuating that Apple scrambled with one month before announcement and redid their entire design to rip off the Prada, which I'm taking from you involves redoing the iPhone to be a touch screen based product. And, of course, this was a blatant copy, but LG never bothered to sue.

    Your sarcasm detector must be broken, clearly grandparent is insinuating that there aren't many ways to design a touch screen phone. Which there aren't. So it follows that all touch screen phones look more or less alike.

  43. Re:Boycott Apple by teg · · Score: 1

    Seriously, this is BS. How does a 7" device look too similiar to a 10" device?

    If it looks the same at 10 inches because of copying the trade dress, shrinking it isn't going to make the problem go away... I can't copy a 0.35 litre Coca-Cola bottle, make 0.2 litre one and claim "it's smaller, it's different!".

  44. Re:So they look alike. It's called "form factor." by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    Among the idiotic things posted here, this is among the more idiotic ones. There are collectors who have thousands of totally different coffee mugs.

    There are also collectors who have thousands of mostly identical coffee mugs with different shit printed on them. Is there a point here somewhere? All the functional ones have certain things in common.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  45. Re:So they look alike. It's called "form factor." by theurge14 · · Score: 1

    From your link:

    "Images of the device appeared on websites such as Engadget Mobile on December 15, 2006.[3] An official press release showing an image of the device appeared on January 18, 2007.[1]"

    LG didn't announce anything until a week after the iPhone announcement. And even when they did ship the thing it was not a smartphone, it wasn't even multitouch. It was a feature phone with a capacitive touchscreen.

    Furthermore Samsung didn't even ship their first Android phone until 2009.

  46. Re:So they look alike. It's called "form factor." by Pieroxy · · Score: 1

    clearly grandparent is insinuating that there aren't many ways to design a touch screen phone. Which there aren't.

    Well, so far, only Apple has made a smartphone with only one button aside the touchscreen. So there must be more options than you claim there are.

  47. form follows function by Chirs · · Score: 1

    For clamshell or candybar phones the design elements varied because the shape lent itself to such variance.

    For a touchscreen device, if the goal is to have the largest possible screen on the smallest possible device, the natural result will be a rectangle with rounded corners and a very thin bezel. The back and sides can look very different, but the screen itself is going to look very similar.

  48. Re:So they look alike. It's called "form factor." by vgerclover · · Score: 1

    Of course, you're insinuating that Apple scrambled with one month before announcement and redid their entire design to rip off the Prada, which I'm taking from you involves redoing the iPhone to be a touch screen based product. And, of course, this was a blatant copy, but LG never bothered to sue.

    No, he's insinuating that considering the design constraints, the result will be very similar when trying to do a touch device, presenting a similar device from the same time period that arrived to that design through the same process Apple followed. Given that externalities drive the design, the resulting design shouldn't be granted exclusivity with the full backing of the law in detriment of other providers and, ultimately, consumers.

  49. Re:So they look alike. It's called "form factor." by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Before the iPhone, I wouldn't have called any of the cellphones on offer "computers." I get the hate for Apple and Steve Jobs, but all the hate for Macs and iPhones on slashdot is way, way misguided. Macs brought us the closest thing we've seen to "The Year of Linux on the Desktop," and the iPhone turned the cellphone market on its fucking head.

    It's ridiculous, we're supposed to be nerds. Try recognising good hardware/software and solidly revolutionary user experiences when you see them FFS!

  50. DUPE! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://slashdot.org/story/99/02/14/2244256/y2k-has-gone-too-far

    http://www.mccullagh.org/y2kculture/reality/19990223.cuttingboard.html

    http://www.mccullagh.org/y2kculture/reactions/19990319.cuttingedge.html

    Google is your friend (and now big brother too!)

    1. Re:DUPE! by ilsaloving · · Score: 1

      O_O

      10 points to you sir (or madam)

  51. Re:So they look alike. It's called "form factor." by cyber-vandal · · Score: 1

    So what? Three manufacturers came up with a similar form factor about the same time. Samsung has just created phones in a similar style. Plagiarism yes but not just of Apple and Apple's ludicrous patent is clearly shown to be the crock it is.

  52. Not similarity by luk3Z · · Score: 0

    It's all not about similarity it'a all about money.

    --
    Recipes for USA bankrupt - http://tinypaste.com/0d66f dd = dollar deluge (printed in the infinity)
  53. Re:So they look alike. It's called "form factor." by Grudge2012 · · Score: 0

    Your sarcasm detector must be broken, clearly grandparent is insinuating that there aren't many ways to design a touch screen phone. Which there aren't. So it follows that all touch screen phones look more or less alike.

    With the difference that the LG Prada is no touchscreen smartphone, its a feature phone with rudimetary touchscreen and a slide out keyboard.

  54. Re:So they look alike. It's called "form factor." by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm not sure that it was the insinuation that you suggest. There's no doubt that Apple have an intelligent, artistic and capable bunch of designers. The point shown by the Prada is that once you're able to produce a device that is basically one big screen, they are all going to end up looking remarkably similar. I suspect that if it (or the iphone) had been bright yellow, no one would have made such a link.

  55. similar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Silver and black, rounded corners,screen takes up almost entire front surface galaxy s3