Sony patent application reveals universal, LCD-based game controller

Well, here’s a bit of an odd one. A recent patent application from Sony has not only revealed an LCD-based game controller (which would be notable enough in itself), but an LCD-based, universal game controller that’s designed to work with more than one game console. As you can see above, the touchscreen would be able to accommodate various buttons and layouts for different consoles — Sony even curiously mentions consoles like the Amiga CD-32 and Atari Jaguar (for emulation, perhaps?), in addition to Microsoft and Nintendo — and the screen itself would be housed in what Sony describes as a “game controller skin.” Of course, this is still just an application for a patent, and we’re pretty sure Sony is focused on another controller at the moment.

[Thanks, Anand]

Sony patent application reveals universal, LCD-based game controller originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 19 Feb 2010 13:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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TiVo granted patent on recording Season Pass subscriptions by priority

It’s been a ten year process, but TiVo just won a patent on managing DVR recording schedules and resolving schedule conflicts using a list of shows ordered by priority. US Patent #7,665,111 covers “recording, storing, and deleting of television and/or web page program material” by generating a prioritized list of shows that contains both shows chosen and ranked by users and shows the DVR think you’ll like, matching that list against the program guide and available recording space, and resolving conflicts based on priority. Yeah, that’s what essentially every DVR on the market does now — but before you run off screaming into the woods, remember that this was all basically uncharted territory when TiVo applied for this patent way back in 1999, the same year it launched one of the first DVRs.

Now, TiVo has been anything but shy when it comes to suing over its other hard-fought DVR patents, so we’ll have to see how the company decides to use this new bit of IP leverage; patents that have been pending for this long aren’t exactly secrets to anyone, and we’re sure TiVo’s competitors have been thinking of clever ways to design around it. (One bit that jumps out: the priority list has to contain both “a viewer’s explicit preferred program selections for recording” and “inferred preferred program selections for recording,” so DVRs that don’t auto-record like TiVos could potentially be excluded.) Of course, we’d rather just see TiVo retake the lead in the DVR space with some entirely new ideas — we’ll see what happens next month.

TiVo granted patent on recording Season Pass subscriptions by priority originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 18 Feb 2010 15:48:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Zatz Not Funny  |  sourceUSPTO (PDF)  | Email this | Comments

Apple granted patent on capacitive multitouch displays

It’s not the mythical pinch-to-zoom patent, but the USPTO just granted a fairly broad Apple patent on capacitive multitouch displays. US Patent #7,663,607 describes a “transparent capacitive sensing medium configured to detect multiple touches” by way of two sandwiched layers of conductive lines hooked up to an appropriate circuit, and also covers a specific type of multitouch display with a similar two-layer capacitive sensor made of glass. Now, there are certainly other types of capacitive sensors out there, so this isn’t a total lockdown, but it’s certainly one more arrow in Apple’s patent quiver, and at the very least it should spur some interesting developments as competitors try to design around it. We’ll see how it shakes down.

Apple granted patent on capacitive multitouch displays originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 17 Feb 2010 11:51:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Patently Apple, iLounge  |  sourceUSPTO (PDF)  | Email this | Comments

TiVo patent points to new sharing and interactivity built around closed captions

The rumors are already flying for that upcoming March 2nd TiVo event, but a recently granted patent gives us one idea of what TiVo’s been up to of late. The basic idea of the patent is to use embedded meta data in TV broadcasts, primarily the closed caption text, to create “event identification data” that makes the DVR — when synced up against related data online — smarter about the content. Example uses include overlaying interactive ads from the content provider, creating “tagged” video files for viewing on a portable device, extracting tagged clips, or even “sharing” segments with other TiVo users. Some of this info, like the commercial detection, is already in use, but the opportunity to “share” a sequence with a friend would be a powerful workaround for existing limitations from broadcasting companies that don’t want users sending copyrighted content to each other. Using the TiVo to merely “tag” the relevant portion of something already recorded by a friend (hopefully with the addition of our helpful “OMG” and “LOL” commentary) makes a lot of sense, and even if we don’t see it in this upcoming revision, it could be a pretty nice win for TiVo in the ongoing war between the well dressed, successful people who create our content and us schlubs who are trying to consume it conveniently.

TiVo patent points to new sharing and interactivity built around closed captions originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 12 Feb 2010 11:49:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Davis Freeberg’s Digital Connection  |  sourceUSPTO  | Email this | Comments

Apple gets a patent on smart screen bezels

Apple might have finally released the iPad, but the rumor mill is already on to prognosticating about the next rev — and as usual, Apple’s patents and patent applications are everyone’s favorite place to start. (And for good reason, really — that very first design patent we inititally noticed way back in 2004 is exactly what the iPad looks like, down to the bezel and Dock connector.) The latest tidbit is a patent granted earlier this week on an intelligent touch-sensitive bezel, which would essentially extend the touchpanel beyoned the edges of the screen to create an entire border of context-specific soft buttons — the iPod app might have playback controls at the bottom, while Safari could put the navigation bar down there and Pages could do formatting stuff at the top. It’s sort of interesting — Palm similarly extends the touch area beyond the screen on the Pre and the Pixi, but not quite like this — but we can’t see how touching the bezel next to an on-screen label is much better than just pressing the screen. Of course, there’s no guaranteeing Apple’s actually going to use any of this in any future products whatsoever, but we’re sure that won’t stop some analyst from waving their magic analyst wand and saying their “supply checks” have indicated a major ODM is already producing these. It’s nice that the world is so predictable sometimes, isn’t it?

Apple gets a patent on smart screen bezels originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 03 Feb 2010 22:15:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple granted patent for a proximity-sensing touchscreen

Never say the USPTO doesn’t have impeccable timing: on the eve of Apple’s tablet launch (and on the very day we finally realized that we’ve been looking at the same set of Apple patent images in loosely-related filings since 2004), the Patent Office has granted Apple some 13 patents, including #7,653,883 for a proximity-sensing multitouch screen. That’s right, granted — as in, Apple can file a lawsuit if others infringe these ideas now. (Usually we just look at patent applications, which have no legal weight.) The proximity-sensing screen is obviously the most interesting of the bunch, since it’s actually related to those same Apple multitouch patents we’ve been seeing forever — it describes a touchscreen that can detect when an object (like a finger or a stylus) is close to the screen but not touching it, and then offer up context-dependent controls based on what it detects. Imagine seeing window controls when your hand gets close to the top of the window — it solves the problem of your finger covering the display. Of course, we have no way of knowing whether it’ll be in whatever device is announced tomorrow — but it’s certainly interesting. There’s also a fun little design patent granted on the external design of the third-gen iPod nano, and then 11 other patents covering things like color management, bandwidth detection, and, uh, “Method and Apparatus for Selectively Switching IC Ports to Card Slots Through the use of Three Switches per Switch Group.” Riveting, we know. Check the full breakdown at the read link.

Apple granted patent for a proximity-sensing touchscreen originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 27 Jan 2010 07:37:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Asimo learns to sing and dance, but has yet to learn how to love

From parade appearances to his most recent star turn at Sundance, it looks like Asimo’s re-invention as a song-and-dance man continues unabated. Most recently, those crazy intellectual property lawyers-cum-bloggers at Stamoulis & Weinblatt, LLC have hepped us to a patent app in Honda’s name that describes a robot that can not only pick up a beat and dance along, but recognize the tune and sing its lyrics as well. The latter is accomplished by a wide array of techno-stuff, including a “sound collecting unit,” a “voice signal generating unit” capable of both scat singing and singing singing, a “self-vocalized voice regulating unit,” and more. As far as the dancing goes, the application implies that it has something to do with a “beat interval estimating unit” and a “beat time reliability calculating unit,” although we like to believe that the automaton learned to dance the way grandpa did — from Arthur Murray on West 57th Street in Manhattan.

Asimo learns to sing and dance, but has yet to learn how to love originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 25 Jan 2010 14:06:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Stamoulis & Weinblatt LLC  |  sourceUnited States Patent Application  | Email this | Comments

Toshiba seeks to prevent Wistron laptop imports to the US

Don’t you sometimes wish legal squabbles like this actually delivered on their promises? There’s pretty much no way that Toshiba’s patent claim with the US International Trade Commission will lead to a ban on Wistron imports — the company builds laptops for Acer, Dell, HP, Lenovo and others, and will likely settle in cash long before any rulings against it — but it’s fun to imagine the mayhem that would result if such an eventuality were to materialize. A quick look at the rankings of global computer vendors shows that Toshiba is mostly trying to throw a banana skin in front of its direct competitors, claiming as it does that Wistron products infringe on its methodologies for touchpad production and file saving when the laptop loses power. The ITC, should it decide to investigate, will take up to 15 months on this matter, so no breath-holding is advised just yet, though if that settlement does eventuate it should be a pretty breathtaking number.

Toshiba seeks to prevent Wistron laptop imports to the US originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 25 Jan 2010 02:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Court case shocker: Judge rules in favor of Rambus, not NVIDIA… sort of

Rambus, a company that has been in a long, drawn out legal battle with NVIDIA over five patents for what seems like ages now, had some good news delivered to it late last week. A judge at the U.S. International Trade Commission issued a preliminary determination finding that NVIDIA had indeed violated three of the five patents — ruling that the other two had not been violated. Now, NVIDIA says that the whole patent mystery continues to be a subject ripe for reexamination by the Patent and Trademark Office — which has consistently found the claims of infringement to be invalid. NVIDIA says it will take the claims to a full commission for a final decision. You’ll probably remember that these five patent infringement claims were part of a much larger suit that Rambus filed against NVIDIA — some of which were dropped earlier this month. Will it never end?

Court case shocker: Judge rules in favor of Rambus, not NVIDIA… sort of originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 23 Jan 2010 17:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple patent application two-fer: new gesture inputs, solar-powered iPods?

We know it’s been tough with the dearth of Apple-related speculation as of late, but it looks like we now finally have a few more clues about what the company might be up to courtesy of a pair of recently published patent applications. The first of those is a new type of gesture-based input device, which would not only be able to detect swipes and other simple gestures, but things like brushing or scooping motions that take into account force and velocity (check out an example after the break). The other patent treads a bit of familiar territory for Apple, and describes a built-in solar power system for electronic devices — such as an iPod, as illustrated above. That could apparently include solar cells covering the entire device, which could be configured to function even if they’re partly obstructed by your hand. The system would also supposedly be able to detect if the battery is completely drained and rely solely on the solar cells to power up the device or, alternatively, switch the solar cells to a “second operational state” if it detects that the battery is charged — if it ever actually exists, that is.

Continue reading Apple patent application two-fer: new gesture inputs, solar-powered iPods?

Apple patent application two-fer: new gesture inputs, solar-powered iPods? originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 23 Jan 2010 15:23:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceMac Rumors  | Email this | Comments