Apple Patent Could Have "Broad Ramifications" For VR Headsets
An anonymous reader writes Filed in 2008, published in 2013, and legally granted to Apple this week, the company's patent for a 'Head-mounted display apparatus for retaining a portable electronic device with display' could have "broad ramifications" for mobile VR headsets like Samsung's Gear VR and Google Cardboard, says patent attorney Eric Greenbaum. "This Apple HMD patent is significant. I would say it introduces potential litigation risks for companies that have or are planning to release a mobile device HMD," he said. "There is no duty for Apple to make or sell an HMD. They can sit on this patent and use it strategically either by enforcing it against potential infringers, licensing it, or using it as leverage in forming strategic partnerships."
for HMD's, VR goggles, displays, etc, HOW THE FUCK did crApple manage to get a patent on this?!?
Like anything Apple patents, it's someone else's work and vision.
Simply put, VR headsets (displays mounted in such a way as to be placed in front of a person's eyes) have been visualized and built for decades.
Lawnmower Man anyone?
My last rough count of ruined kickstarter projects is 4. Few things are sadder than a multibillion dollar international company serving cease and desist letters to fledgling startups who operated in good faith with due diligence. Ahh apple, will you use your 6+ to capture the exact moment you broke that 22yr old business owners heart?
He's realized that Apple's legal actions ultimately harm the tech environment of the school, putting the students' future competitiveness potentially at risk. Continuing to fund such activities betrays the students' educational interests.
My God, it's Full of Source!
OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
Fails the "obvious" test though. Same way VR is/will be used with PCs, consoles, and other devices that are, essentially, computers (and that can also be used for communications). A laptop computer is a "mobile device". So's a tablet. Either of which can easily be used to communicate with others. Anyway, pairing VR with a smaller "computer" (like a smart phone) is simply too obvious to be patentable. William Gibson was pairing VR with "mobile" devices 30 years ago (cyberspace "deck", anyone?!?).
This patent is bogus and should be revoked. Whoever approved it should be fired.