Thursday, February 28, 2013

#9: Patent Claims Demystified


Patent Claims


Claims are the parts of a patent or paten application, which define the boundaries of protection granted by the patent. Patent claims are the legal basis for your patent protection. They form a protective boundary line around your patent that lets others know when they are infringing on your rights. The limits of this line are defined by the words and phrasing of your claims.  The claims are of the utmost importance both during prosecution and litigation.

Patents have not always contained claims. In many European countries, patents did not contain claims before the 1970s. It was then often difficult (and subjective) to decide whether a product infringed a patent, since the sole basis to know the extent of protection was the description, in view of the prior art. Claims have been necessary parts of U.S. patent applications since the enactment of the Patent Act of 1836.  Each claim should have only one meaning which can be either broad or narrow, but not both at the same time. In general a narrow claim specifies more details than a broader claim. Having many claims, where each one is a different scope allows you to have legal title to several aspects of your invention.

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

#8: Apple Granted 27 Patents - part 2

More Interesting Apple Patents



    In one of the recent article, Apple has been granted 27 Patents covering Adaptive Sensors, Cellular MacBook Antennas, Tactile Feedback for iDevices and more.  One of the interesting is the Patent for tactile feedback covering a unique iPod accessory.  First, Apple doesn’t sell or make that many iPods. The patent felt a little outdated.  Second, this patent granted for one of their initial tactile feedback inventions for the iPod and iPod touch.  In some embodiments, the electronic device may simultaneously provide different types of tactile feedback, visual feedback, audio feedback, “olfactory” feedback, or any other suitable combination of feedback.  Really olfactory!  So, you can now smell your phone or iPod.  What people think about the use of the olfactory feedback?




#7: Apple Granted 27 Patents


Interesting Apple Patents



    In one of the recent article, Apple has been granted 27 Patents covering Adaptive Sensors, Cellular MacBook Antennas, Tactile Feedback for iDevices and more.  Few of these patents caught my eyes.  One of which is the patent for Microslot Antennas for Future Cellular MacBook Pro.  The specialized microslot antenna that could be used in a future MacBook that will provide users with built-in cellular data capabilities as well as voice-over-internet-protocol for telephone calls.  So, what is the big deal with this antenna?  First it’s “invisible” that embedded into the housing of a Mac, or iPhone, or iPad, which save space inside these compact devices.  Second, currently devices may contain antennas for GSM, 3G/LTE, GPS, WiFi, Bluetooth with this new antenna they can just build a single antenna for all different antennas requirement.   Apple has been pushing for size and aesthetics for years in their products with increasing complexity of wireless communications.