Apple receives patent for alternative NFC technology

NFC is all the rage lately, especially on Android devices. The ability to share something with a friend just by tapping your phones together is pretty marvelous, and could be something that will take off and become the norm in the future. However, Apple was just granted a patent that involves the same kind of techniques, but is different than NFC.

Apple currently doesn’t have any devices with NFC built in, but that doesn’t mean the company has been ignoring the technology. They’ve been not only studying NFC, but have also been researching alternative methods for the NFC technology. The company received a patent on the alternative technology that deal with the “method and apparatus for triggering network device discovery.”

While it was heavily rumored that the iPhone 5 would come with NFC capabilities, many anxious customers were disappointed to find out that the new device did not come with the technology. Naturally, because of the rising popularity of NFC, a lot of people were confused by the move. However, Apple CEO Tim Cook stood behind the company’s opinion that NFC isn’t needed just yet.

Maybe he’s right. Does the iPhone really need NFC? Cook said that Apple’s new Passbook app was enough to make its customers happy. While the app doesn’t use NFC, it allows you to manage all of your tickets for various events and use it for confirmation and such without having a physical copy to deal with.

[via Patently Apple]


Apple granted new patent for original iPad design

Apple granted patent for original iPad design

We already know what some of you are thinking, but that doesn’t change the reality on the ground: Apple has been granted a design claim patent for a “portable display device” that looks a whole lot like the original iPad. Filed just a day before the big reveal in 2010, it’s both specific to the tablet and cites additional references dating as far back as the early 1990s. The claim likewise includes elements that transpired between the filing and the granted date, such as a certain legal squabble that carries on to this day. While we can’t say we’re enthusiastic for what might follow from the patent becoming official — we know Samsung isn’t, despite victories in the tablet space — it does give Apple one more tool for arguing that its total iPad design is unique, not just the individual components.

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Apple granted new patent for original iPad design originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 16 Oct 2012 16:15:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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New Google Glasses Patent Gives a Shout Out to Left Eye(s) [Google Glasses]

Google has secured a patent for left-handed people that puts the Google Glasses eyepiece on the other side. Someone at Google must be a pretty huge TLC fan (RIP Lisa Left Eye Lopes). More »

Google nabs design patent for left-eyed Google Glass, frees southpaws from tyranny

Google nabs design patent for leftside Google Glass, frees southpaws from tyranny

No more shall lefties wanting Google Glass toil under the oppression of right-handed overlords. Not if Google’s newly granted design patent is an indication, at any rate. The filing simply puts the eyepiece on the other side for those who are either naturally left-inclined or just that much opposed to the optical status quo. There’s no guarantee Google will be so accommodating when Glass reaches the general public, although we’re hopeful: when early adopters are already paying a small fortune to leap in, it wouldn’t hurt to produce a batch for left eye use and give the more committed southpaws among us the freedom they’ve craved since Google I/O.

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Google nabs design patent for left-eyed Google Glass, frees southpaws from tyranny originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 16 Oct 2012 10:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple Patents 3D Remote Tech, Software To Protect iPhones From Unauthorized Use

findmyiphone_hero

Apple was granted a number of patents today, including a couple that could have big implications for its range of mobile devices. One is an oldie but a goody, describing a Wii remote style 3D control mechanism that users sensors to determine its position in space, filed in 2006 (the same year as the Wii itself), and the other is a system for detecting, gathering and providing information about unauthorized users of a person’s iPhone or other mobile device.

The security measures are most interesting, and also most likely to produce some kind of tangible results users will see. Apple says in its patent that it could identify users based on factors like heartbeat via embedded sensors, photographs or voice recordings, combined with things like suspicious behavior. That would trigger a system to begin monitoring said user, taking photos, recording audio and snapping screenshots of behavior, as well as logging keystrokes and keeping a record of Internet usage. For extra security, the device could also be set to lock down/wipe when an unauthorized user takes control. Finally, the info gathered can be sent to the authorized user or authorities to help track down the unauthorized user. Apple also describes a way in which a device can be put into security mode depending on its proximity to another device, linked by NFC.

These security measures would be tricky to get just right – users would have to be careful about how they set them if there’s a high likelihood that their devices will be used by others on a regular basis. But Apple could implement this as yet another extension of its Find My iPhone services, and this would also make a lot of sense in high-sensitivity enterprise settings.

The 3D controller would allow for a screen to use IR, accelerometer and photo detectors to make on-screen objects manipulable through movements of a control device in three-dimensional space. Apple doesn’t mention the iPhone by name in the patent, since it actually predates its existence, but it does suggest that an iPod could eventually become the control device in question. As for applications, this looked like a prime candidate for inclusion in the Apple TV, but nothing using it has been forthcoming from Apple. Might the company still do something with this, after essentially sitting on the idea for six years? I think we’ve moved on to a point where Apple is more interested in Siri-type voice commands, or perhaps gesture based controls, than on the slightly unnatural act of moving a small device around in the air to make something happen on-screen, and it seems to be doing just fine in gaming with its current approach.

Apple is and always has been a ‘patent first, ask questions later’ type of organization, so in general looking for these things to make their way to shipping products is always pretty much a guessing game. But the security features, if done well, continue Apple’s progress with its iOS device user services, and could provide a lot of value to device owners, and could indeed be a welcome step in helping prevent or at least resolve more cases of mobile device theft.


Apple appeals Tokyo court’s ruling in Samsung patent lawsuit

Hold your surprise, folks. Apple and Samsung are still at war over patents, the latest move in the ongoing battle being an appeal from Apple about a Tokyo court’s ruling in favor of Samsung. The ruling was made on August 31st by the Tokyo District Court, stating that Samsung did not violate Apple’s patent on synchronizing music and video with servers.

This information comes from Yutaka Sakai, a court spokesman. With the ruling, Apple was ordered to pay the fees of the lawsuit. This comes after Apple’s victory in August, when it won $1 billion in damages in California. This comes after the report earlier today that Apple is officially withdrawing as much business as it can from Samsung, meeting only contractual minimums.

Both Apple and Samsung are leaders in the smartphone market. Apple has been moving away from ordering from Samsung over the last couple weeks, originally stating that it was doing so to diversify its component orders for risk management. Presently, Samsung gets 4% revenue from the components it sells to Apple, according to Bloomberg.

Apple filed seeking to have a variety of Samsung products banned in the United States, with success on 23 of the products. Eight of the products received injunctions, all of them smartphones, including the Galaxy S II and the Droid Charge. Samsung then retorted, claiming the Apple’s iPhone 5 infringed on eight of its patents, after successfully winning a lift on the ban of US sales for the Galaxy Tab 10.1.

[via Bloomberg]


Apple appeals Tokyo court’s ruling in Samsung patent lawsuit is written by Brittany Hillen & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Nikon Wants to Make a Throwing Your Camera to Take a Picture "Feature" [Cameras]

Camera toss photos can be wonderful, but they’re notoriously hard to pull off. Nikon just filed a patent for a technology that would make high-flying photography a snap. Does Nikon seriously want people to throw their cameras? More »

Apple files patent application for fingerprint sensor that can be transparent or opaque

Apple files patent application for fingerprint sensor that can be transparent or opaque

While Apple has flirted with biometric-based patents before, we’ve yet to see them implemented in real-world technology. That hasn’t stopped it from filing yet another one though, as the latest application reveals a fingerprint sensor apparently embedded into the iPhone itself. The patent describes a hardware “window” that can become selectively “transparent or opaque.” When transparent, it would reveal a component comprised of an “image capture device, a strobe flash, a biometric sensor, a light sensor, a proximity sensor, or a solar panel, or a combination thereof” as a method of unlocking the phone. According to the filing, the biometric sensor in question might indeed be a fingerprint reader. The document goes on to describe an alternative method using face or eye recognition technology that can be used not just for security purposes, but for possible e-commerce solutions like completing an online transaction. Of course, take any of these patent applications with a generous pinch of salt — we haven’t seen an Apple stylus yet, for example — but perhaps this is the reason Apple bought fingerprint sensor maker AuthenTec back in July.

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Apple files patent application for fingerprint sensor that can be transparent or opaque originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 12 Oct 2012 04:51:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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South Korea delays ban on iPads and iPhones until Apple can appeal

iPhone 4S and Galaxy Nexus

Apple and Samsung have been recreating the Cold War through their own mutually assured destruction policy, and nowhere is that more apparent than their Pyrrhic victories in South Korea. For Apple, however, the pain will be just a little easier to bear. A Seoul court has confirmed that it’s staying the ban on older iPads and iPhones until Apple can complete the appeals process; the Cupertino crew won’t face the full penalty unless the appeals court upholds the verdict. Samsung hasn’t yet asked for a similar pause on a ban covering some of its Android devices, though, which could lead to at least a momentarily lopsided situation in Samsung’s home country. It’s nonetheless a brief reprieve in a war that sadly won’t end anytime soon.

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South Korea delays ban on iPads and iPhones until Apple can appeal originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 11 Oct 2012 16:38:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple Wants To Use Your Fingerprints to Unlock Your iPhone [Apple]

Apple was just granted a patent for technology that could lead to a fancy new biometric unlocking mechanism on future Apple products. The technology could also be used to implement new security features for ecommerce. The patent comes just a few months after Apple bought security technology company AuthenTec for $356 million over the summer. More »