Nokia collects design patent for a tablet, evokes N8 aesthetics (update: there’s another one!)

It’s no secret that Nokia’s been casting an interested eye over the tablet market and now we have a bit of extra evidence to show its intent, courtesy of the United States Patent and Trademark Office. The federal bureau has just published a design patent granted to the Finnish company for a tablet device, which was applied for on May 28th, 2010. Sadly, that date tells us what we’re looking at is most probably a shelved MeeGo machine that never made it to market rather than an upcoming world conqueror, but still, here it is for all of us to gawk at and admire. Judging by the 3.5mm headphone jack outline — which, like the rest of the dotted lines on the sketch, isn’t covered by the patent — we’re likely looking at a 9- or 10-inch slate, whose design reminds us most acutely of Nokia’s N8 phone. See more pics in the gallery below before returning to your mind cave to fantasize about what might have been… or might still be.

Update: Electronista notes that Nokia’s filed for and received the rights to a second tablet design patent, this one eschewing the N8 inspiration for a more generic shape. See it pictured after the break or at the second link below.

[Thanks, Pradeep]

Continue reading Nokia collects design patent for a tablet, evokes N8 aesthetics (update: there’s another one!)

Nokia collects design patent for a tablet, evokes N8 aesthetics (update: there’s another one!) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 15 Mar 2011 14:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceUSPTO (D634,317), (D634,318)  | Email this | Comments

Apple patent woos with tales of ultra-slim audio connectors for lusciously thin devices

Apple patent woos with tales of ultra-slim audio connectors for ultra-slim devices

We’re still a long way from reaching the point where our gadgets can’t get any thinner and, while the 8.7mm iPod Shuffle is just about king of the hill for the moment, Apple is already envisioning a future where where the humble 3.5mm audio jack is too thick. A recently revealed patent application called “Low Profile Plug Receptacle” describes a number of different ways to create audio ports that are thinner than current models but yet won’t take us back to the sinister miniUSB adapter days of yore. One of the potential solutions has a “semi-flexible” housing that expands willingly to receive your headphones’ clumsy attentions, while another is recessed beneath a pair of doors that flip open to make room when the plug is inserted. As always with these applications there’s no reason to believe they’ll be ever appearing in a consumer device, but that doesn’t mean we can’t dream of a future where the gold-plated jack on your buds is thicker than the bulkiest part of your phone.

Apple patent woos with tales of ultra-slim audio connectors for lusciously thin devices originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 Mar 2011 13:51:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink 9to5 Mac  |  sourceUSPTO  | Email this | Comments

Court rules in Sony’s favor against LG, PlayStation 3 free to enter Europe again

Well, it looks like there won’t be a widespread PlayStation 3 shortage in Europe anytime soon — the Hague’s civil court of justice has just ruled in Sony’s favor in its dispute with LG, and ordered that the 300,000 PS3s currently seized by customs be released to Sony for distribution across the continent. LG has also reportedly been ordered to pay €130,000 in legal fees — and if it doesn’t comply, it will face a fine of €200,000 per day until it does. That doesn’t mean that the tussle between the two companies is over, however, as this ruling doesn’t have anything to do with the patents at the heart of the dispute.

[Thanks, Manit]

Court rules in Sony’s favor against LG, PlayStation 3 free to enter Europe again originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Mar 2011 12:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Gamers Mint  |  sourceInsideGamer, @FOSSpatents (Twitter)  | Email this | Comments

Apple patent application for ‘Dynamically Generated Ring Tones’ could make magical videos of your friends

Apple Patent

Ever wish life was like a movie, that theme songs went to highlight your every dramatic action? This patent application from Cupertino isn’t quite like that, but it’s close, basically creating dynamic music videos for your friends when they call. It describes a means of stitching together video and audio sequences of the caller and dynamically composting them to create a beautiful little ditty celebrating your BFF — or your mother in law, as it were. Such sequences are to be generated by so-called “seed” songs or videos, content that can either be stored directly on the recipient’s phone or pulled from Genius data stored in the ether. There’s potential here for great stuff, but we already dread a future where data comes from browsing habits and instead of cool tunes and video sequences we’re served jingles and McDonald’s commercials.

Apple patent application for ‘Dynamically Generated Ring Tones’ could make magical videos of your friends originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Mar 2011 02:42:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink SlashGear  |  sourceUSPTO  | Email this | Comments

PlayStation 3 shipments to Europe now being seized after LG wins injunction against Sony

Sony and LG have been going toe to toe with allegations of patent infringement for over a year now, but Sony’s now been dealt what’s surely its biggest setback to date in Europe. The civil court of justice in the Hague has just granted LG a preliminary injunction that will see all new PlayStation 3s imported into Europe confiscated by customs for at least ten days. Those are apparently now already being stockpiled in Dutch warehouses while the drama plays out, and there remains a possibility that the injunction will be extended even further, which would almost certainly lead to a shortage of PS3s on store shelves — as the Guardian notes, retailers generally have two to three weeks worth of stock on hand across the continent. Not surprisingly, Sony is said to be “frantically” trying to get the ban lifted, but it isn’t making any public comments on the matter at the moment.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

PlayStation 3 shipments to Europe now being seized after LG wins injunction against Sony originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 28 Feb 2011 14:11:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceThe Guardian  | Email this | Comments

Apple patent application opens the door to free-form acoustic gesture commands

Apple patent application might open the door to free-form acoustic gesture commands

Another Apple patent application has come to light that’s making us stop the daily grind for a moment and ponder the possibilities. This one talks about scattering a bunch of acoustic transducers (basically, microphones) throughout the case of a laptop. No, they aren’t there to pick up the sweet sounds of your humming along with Rihanna and, while the application doesn’t make it perfectly clear what their purpose is for, we’re liking Patently Apple’s conclusion that this is to enable acoustic commands. The application describes a microprocessor that can “interpret electrical signals generated by the one or more acoustic transducers as input.” The idea is that these transducers detect a finger making contact with the chassis and register those vibrations as gestures. A similar concept is demonstrated in a video below, so watch that then start dreaming. Dragging your finger along the bezel to scroll? A non-capacitive touchpad as wide as the keyboard? Music games that finally let you show off your finger drumming prowess?

Continue reading Apple patent application opens the door to free-form acoustic gesture commands

Apple patent application opens the door to free-form acoustic gesture commands originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 21 Feb 2011 14:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Patently Apple  |  sourceUSPTO  | Email this | Comments

Apple patent application points to denser batteries, improved charging technique

Some might think a ten-hour Macbook battery mighty fine, but we’re happy to say that Cupertino’s not quite satisfied. AppleInsider spotted a pair of Apple patent applications detailing a improved way of juicing up those lithium-polymer cells, which should greatly increase the number of recharge cycles they can endure — or, optionally, allow Apple to use denser batteries that last longer on a charge. We’ll break it down for you: the graph in the upper-left shows how Li-ion batteries currently charge, first very rapidly (constant current, increasing voltage) and then more slowly (constant voltage, decreasing current) to top the cells off.

What Apple’s proposing is the multi-step method depicted on the right, where current and voltage trade off, to charge the battery while being far less harsh on the physical chemistry of the electrodes inside. As you can see in the bottom graph, the multi-step CC-CV cells lose much less of their potential after 300 recharge cycles, but that’s not all Apple’s cooking up — the company figures that it can increase the thickness of the electrodes to improve battery life (by as much as 28Wh/L, according to one chart) without negative effect thanks to the softer charge. Sure, we’d rather have plant-eating graphene supercapcitors, but this sounds like a plan for now.

Apple patent application points to denser batteries, improved charging technique originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 20 Feb 2011 15:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Apple Insider  |  sourceUSPTO (1), (2)  | Email this | Comments

IcedRobot Android fork to sidestep legal battle between Oracle, Google

We’d prepared ourselves for a drawn-out legal battle between Oracle and Google when we heard the former was suing the latter for Java-related copyright infringement, but fortunately for Android enthusiasts, not everyone was so resigned. A team of developers are working on an Android fork called IcedRobot (yep, that’s the logo) to separate the offending Dalvik Virtual Machine from the OS, hopefully circumventing this epic argument altogether. The project seeks to create a Java Virtual Machine (JVM) that is based on OpenJDK (an open-source implementation of Java), avoiding Oracle’s Apache Harmony, and to allow Android to run on just about any PC with the use of Hotspot, another device non-specific JVM using open-source Java. It’s a tall order, and the devilish little Android has already gained a healthy amount of tech industry skepticism, but we’re interested to see if these guys can make it work. Either way, we’re pretty sure we’ve still got years of legal volleying to go before Google and Oracle can play nice again — this ain’t no People’s Court, folks.

IcedRobot Android fork to sidestep legal battle between Oracle, Google originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 11 Feb 2011 06:40:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Linux for Devices  |  sourceMario Torre  | Email this | Comments

LG files ITC complaint against Sony, goes blow for blow

Late last year, Sony smacked LG with claims of patent infringement, and now the Korean company is swinging back with complaints of its own. LG reportedly filed two claims with the ITC on February 4th, accusing Sony devices — including Bravia and PlayStation 3 — of stepping on eight separate LG patents. We knew something like this couldn’t be far behind Sony’s ITC filing and accompanying federal court case, and we’re equally unmoved to hear LG is firing back with its very own civil suit, recently filed in California. Last year we saw patent infringement suits spread like meningitis in a college dorm, and if this dispute is any sign, we can expect to see more of the same in 2011. Let the litigation begin!

LG files ITC complaint against Sony, goes blow for blow originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 08 Feb 2011 21:36:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceBloomberg  | Email this | Comments

Sony, Fujifilm patents are half-camera, half-origami

Point and shoot cameras are tricky to hold still, but the powers that be thought up a crazy fix — build bending, sliding, transforming grips right into the body of the camera. Sony’s patented the idea you see immediately above, which turns the sliding lens cover into a handle using tiny hinges (or perhaps electrorheological fluid, we’re not sure). Amazingly enough, the basic concept actually isn’t new: Sony itself references a Fujifilm patent whose cover-turned-grip protects the rear LCD instead. Neither look terribly comfortable, but which would you rather choose: a pocketable camera that snaps stable single-handed shots, or one that monopolizes your fingertips? Take a gander at one of Fujifilm’s proposed designs after the break.

Continue reading Sony, Fujifilm patents are half-camera, half-origami

Sony, Fujifilm patents are half-camera, half-origami originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 02 Feb 2011 00:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Sony Alpha Rumors, Gizmodo  |  sourceUSPTO  | Email this | Comments