Software Patents Harm Phones, Again
- Dr. Roy Schestowitz
- 2008-02-04 04:17:13 UTC
- Modified: 2008-02-04 04:17:13 UTC
Just over a week ago, a company
somehow managed to patent the mobile computer. This ought to be one of the more prominent illustrations of the bad state of the USPTO. In recent days, it was also reported that Skype
got sued by a lesser-known company.
Net2Phone, the pioneering Internet phone company that was destined to become a subsidiary of IDT despite objectons from some shareholders, seemingly has figured out a way to strike back against their enduring irrelevance.
Now, they’re taking Skype to court for patent infringement.
More on this in
Techdirt. Meanwhile, Symbian, whose
main backer loves software patents,
got itself another patent.
A bit of a curiosity this one. If you go to Gauss, you can view the patent for the Symbian OS. As far as I can tell, the premise is that EPOC provides an efficient way of storing strings that, in turn, allows the OS to be created in c++ rather than c.
If you no longer recall this, see
an explanation of how Nokia harmed Google's Android with its Trolltech acquisition. It is also worth pointing out this older article from DigiTimes that
attributed Android's delays to patent issues.
TI's handset chipsets will find their way into the Google phone should the company decide to roll out an EDGE-compliant handset, but Qualcomm could turn out to be the winner if Google decides to bet on a 3G model, the sources noted.
Some of tomorrow's more important computers will be mobile device. The field is becoming a legal land mine which hinders development.
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