Apple patent would have devices sense a squeeze through metal

Apple patent would have devices sense a squeeze through metal

Apple likes to build devices using metal. Unfortunately, the material isn’t usually conducive to touch, in the literal sense of the word — capacitive touch doesn’t always register on a metal gadget, and you can often forget about a response to pressure. A newly published patent from the company could at last get these unfeeling devices to acknowledge our grip without putting sensors above the surface. Apple’s method would detect the changes in capacitance between hidden nodes when a device’s shell is put under strain, and trigger a hardware or software reaction when there’s a strong-enough squeeze. The concept is simple enough. Just what Apple would like to do with the patent, if anything, is the real riddle. The patent was originally filed in 2009, and covers just about everything computer- or mobile-based that Apple could produce; any burning desire to use the technique would likely have been satisfied by now. If our future iPhones or Macs ever answer a hug with more than just cold indifference, though, we’ll know why.

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Source: USPTO

Microsoft patent application would automatically disinfect grimy touchscreens (update: related tech)

Microsoft patent application would automatically disinfect our grimy touchscreens

We’ve all seen that touchscreen device in the store that’s covered with fingerprints (and possibly contagions) from curious shoppers. While it’s unlikely that we’ll get sick from all that touching, Microsoft is trying for a patent that would set our minds at ease. The method would send ultraviolet light bouncing through a film on or inside a touchscreen, disinfecting fingertips and contact areas without blasting the person directly. Processing inside the gadget could also dictate just when and for how long the UV blast would run. It could kick in only after a user was done, for example, and last just long enough to kill common germs. There’s no clues that Microsoft is about to use the technology in real-world products. Still, we wouldn’t mind touching an extra-sanitary Windows phone or tablet — or rather, someone else’s.

Update: Microsoft applied for a UV cleaning approach before, but that depended on coupling UV with the backlight; this newer patent would give Microsoft considerably more flexibility.

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Source: USPTO

BlackBerry granted gesture recognition patent for touch-free image manipulation

BlackBerry granted gesture recognition patent for touchfree image manipulation

If BlackBerry lives to see 2014 (and beyond), it could end up delighting smartphone users with some neat gesture recognition tech. In a recently surfaced patent filing, the company formerly known as RIM outlines a method for selecting onscreen images using hand or finger movements above a display. By synthesizing a combo of images — one taken with IR, the other without — the software would be able to determine the intended area of selection. And just in case there was any doubt this feature would be headed to smartphones and tablets, the docs go on to specify its use within “a mobile communications device, comprising: a digital camera… [and] a cellular subsystem.” So there you have it — you’ll either potentially see this hands-off editing tool pop up in future BB devices or BB simply stands to make a some nice coin in licensing fees.

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Source: USPTO

Apple Proposes Patent To End Blurry iPhone Photos

Apple Proposes Patent To End Blurry iPhone Photos

Folks who wander around the US Patent Office (USPTO) website have discovered a patent application from Apple that describes a technique used to avoid having blurry photos. Named “Image capturing device having continuous image capture”, the idea is to have the camera capture frames at all times, and when the user presses the shutter button, the camera has not only the frame that was intended for capture, but also many more before (and possibly) after the shutter button action. Some cameras already do this today. (more…)

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Watch This Blind Man Uses Instagram On His iPhone Effortlessly, Snappgrip for iPhone adds a camera grip to your smartphone,

BlackBerry tries for patents on concertina-like keyboards in smartphones

BlackBerry tries for patents on concertinalike keyboards in smartphones

When we think of hidden keyboards on our phones, our thoughts usually turn to thick sliders — notwithstanding the occasional wacky twister. BlackBerry has filed for a pair of patents that would be even subtler by hiding the keys inside of a phone’s main body. Looking somewhat like concertinas in practice, the concepts would pivot keys into place as the phone owner pulls out a retractable section to start typing. BlackBerry suggests it could work for both conventional smartphones (what you see above) as well as a not-entirely-practical design with keys on opposite sides of a display, much like a single-screen LG Doubleplay. We’re not expecting BlackBerry to ship related products anytime soon when the Q10 represents its immediate future in hardware keyboards, but it’s tough to rule out the ideas altogether when they could slim keyboarded phones without losing that coveted stealthiness. They might stand a better chance of reaching the market than some of BlackBerry’s more outlandish experiments.

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Source: USPTO (1), (2)

Google files patent application for touch-based, full-finger keyboard layout

Google files patent application for touchbased, fullfinger keyboard layout

Tapping on glass… it’s not the future — it’s the present. Except software-based touch typing solutions haven’t really extended beyond the cramped confines of mobile phones and tablets. But what if there were a touch type experience that mapped to the full extent of your digital reach? Something more akin to a typical two-handed physical keyboard? Well, that’s just what Google’s proposing in a patent application that’s surfaced today. Filed back in September of 2011, the USPTO doc outlines a method for displaying “geometric shapes on a touch-screen display… [that correspond] to a respective finger of a user” and allow for text entry via a “sliding movement.” So in layman’s terms, if this ever comes to pass, you’d be able to type on glass with all ten fingers by, presumably, flicking upwards. Not sure how we feel about that just yet — it certainly would require some extra screen real estate. Maybe even something as accommodating as this, but Nexus-flavored.

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Source: USPTO

Apple Has Trademarked the Design of Its Stores

Yes, you are looking at a technical drawing of an Apple store. And yes, it does form part of an approved trademark request which means nobody can imitate Apple’s temples to tech. More »

Apple applies for shoe-life sensor patent, puts it in hypothetical brogues

Apple applies for shoelife sensor patent, puts it in hypothetical brogues

Nike’s running sensor, a detachable piece of tech that connected to a companion iOS app, is the closest that Apple’s associated itself to foot metrics so far, but folded inside the company’s patent applications for today is this left-field addition, a shoe wear-out sensor. We assume the idea is geared towards runners — presumably these brogue outlines we’re looking at above are just red herrings.

The application draws together two possible outcomes: one with an thin sensor layer built your footwear of choice and another which keeps the sensor in the heel. A “unitless activity number” is also mentioned, where the device (which could include accelerometers, flexibility sensors and more) could craft an “activity value” based on your movement — this would then also be used to gauge the shelf-life of your current footwear. When this pre-specified threshold is exceeded, it would then sound the alarm. According to one diagram, the process could connect with an external display, likely broadcasting its concern to your nearby iOS device. But if your running needs demand a sensor to tell you when your sneakers are cooked, there might be other things worth tracking.

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Source: USPTO

iRobot applies for ‘all-in-one’ 3D printer patent: aims to reduce need for post-processing

iRobot applies for 'allinone' 3D printer patent which reduces need for postprocessing

It’s no floor cleaner, so it looks like iRobot‘s looking to expand its horizons, filing a patent application for a “robotic fabricator”. While not granted (yet), the USPTO filing outlines an all-in-one 3D printer that is capable of post-print milling and processing. Typical 3D printing results in an ‘overhang’ excess that needs to be clipped from the finished article, but iRobot’s loosely worded notion would process these automatically, as well as seams formed where parts are fused together. Multiple manipulators mean that the object can be contorted over “at least six axes”, while the toolhead would combine together a print and milling head, alongside an exotically-named robocasting extruder, which is used in building up the layers of material. The design aims to reduce the need for any non-automated manufacturing processes, hopefully meaning effortless turtleshell kart production and reduced printing blemishes — that is, if it makes it to reality.

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Via: Adafruit

Source: USPTO

Microsoft hopes to patent an ‘inconspicuous mode’ for phones

Microsoft hopes to patent an 'inconspicuous mode' for phones, give that Lumia a lowprofile

We’ve all seen That Person in the movie theater: the one whose compulsive texting guarantees a distraction for everyone through the bright screen. Microsoft might not change that disruptive behavior, but it could save us from noticing through a new patent application. The team in Redmond is exploring an “inconspicuous mode” that would dial down not just the screen brightness and sound, but also the information on the display — it could remove a bright background and limit the number of attention-grabbing notifications. The technique could even detect certain conditions, such a very dark bedroom, and invoke the mode without having to ask. Like with most patents, we don’t know if Microsoft plans to use the technology in earnest; we’ve reached out, just in case a similar mode has previously lurked in the background. When the patent filling is crafted with Windows Phone in mind, however, we wouldn’t be surprised if some future version of the mobile OS learns to mind its manners.

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Source: USPTO