Apple granted patents for visual voicemail, touch screen technologies
The U.S. Patent & Trademark Office issued a batch of 21 patents to Apple for a range of inventions, including technologies related to the iPhone's visual voicemail feature and an integrated touch screen.
Voicemail manager
U.S. Patent No. 7,996,792, entitled "Voicemail manager for portable multifunction device" describes a method for managing voicemail messages on a touch screen display that allows users to scrub through messages using touch input.
Drawings included with the filing depict an rough outline of the iPhone and the Visual Voicemail interface.
In the filing, the iPhone maker describes push-button voicemail interfaces as "cumbersome and inefficient," and puts forth visual voicemail as a "more transparent, intuitive and efficient" solution.
Apple's list of specific voicemail features includes: "displaying a list of voicemail messages; detecting selection by a user of a respective voicemail message in the list; responding to the user selection of the respective voicemail message by initiating playback of the user-selected voicemail message; displaying a progress bar for the user-selected voicemail message...; detecting movement of a finger of the user from a first position on the progress bar to a second position on the progress bar; and responding to the detection of the finger movement by restarting playback of the user-selected voicemail message at a position within the user-selected voicemail message corresponding substantially to the second position on the progress bar."
The list of inventors includes Apple CEO Steve Jobs and Senior Vice President Scott Forstall. The patent was filed on June 28, 2007, though related patent documents date back to September 2006.
Apple introduced its Visual Voicemail feature alongside the original iPhone in 2007. The technology was subsequently targeted in a patent infringement suit from Klausner Technologies that alleged Apple and AT&T had violated its visual voicemail patents. The two companies eventually agreed to license the patents for an unknown amount.
Integrated touch screen
The USPTO also granted Apple U.S. Patent No. 7,995,041, which describes an "Integrated touch screen." The invention integrates touch sensing circuity into the display pixel stackup of a display.
Apple claims that the new method can make the display thinner, brighter and require less power, while requiring fewer parts and/or processing steps. The patent could be implemented in a mobile phone, digital media player, or a personal computer, according to the company.
The invention suggests that using multi-function circuit elements to operate as part of both the display circuitry and the touch sensing circuitry. "The multi-function circuit elements can be, for example, capacitors in display pixels of an LCD that can be configured to operate as storage capacitors/electrodes, common electrodes, conductive wires/pathways, etc., of the display circuitry in the display system, and that may also be configured to operate as circuit elements of the touch sensing circuitry," Apple wrote in the filing.
Shih Chang Chang is listed as the inventor for the patent. The application was filed on September 11, 2009.
Voicemail manager
U.S. Patent No. 7,996,792, entitled "Voicemail manager for portable multifunction device" describes a method for managing voicemail messages on a touch screen display that allows users to scrub through messages using touch input.
Drawings included with the filing depict an rough outline of the iPhone and the Visual Voicemail interface.
In the filing, the iPhone maker describes push-button voicemail interfaces as "cumbersome and inefficient," and puts forth visual voicemail as a "more transparent, intuitive and efficient" solution.
Apple's list of specific voicemail features includes: "displaying a list of voicemail messages; detecting selection by a user of a respective voicemail message in the list; responding to the user selection of the respective voicemail message by initiating playback of the user-selected voicemail message; displaying a progress bar for the user-selected voicemail message...; detecting movement of a finger of the user from a first position on the progress bar to a second position on the progress bar; and responding to the detection of the finger movement by restarting playback of the user-selected voicemail message at a position within the user-selected voicemail message corresponding substantially to the second position on the progress bar."
The list of inventors includes Apple CEO Steve Jobs and Senior Vice President Scott Forstall. The patent was filed on June 28, 2007, though related patent documents date back to September 2006.
Apple introduced its Visual Voicemail feature alongside the original iPhone in 2007. The technology was subsequently targeted in a patent infringement suit from Klausner Technologies that alleged Apple and AT&T had violated its visual voicemail patents. The two companies eventually agreed to license the patents for an unknown amount.
Integrated touch screen
The USPTO also granted Apple U.S. Patent No. 7,995,041, which describes an "Integrated touch screen." The invention integrates touch sensing circuity into the display pixel stackup of a display.
Apple claims that the new method can make the display thinner, brighter and require less power, while requiring fewer parts and/or processing steps. The patent could be implemented in a mobile phone, digital media player, or a personal computer, according to the company.
The invention suggests that using multi-function circuit elements to operate as part of both the display circuitry and the touch sensing circuitry. "The multi-function circuit elements can be, for example, capacitors in display pixels of an LCD that can be configured to operate as storage capacitors/electrodes, common electrodes, conductive wires/pathways, etc., of the display circuitry in the display system, and that may also be configured to operate as circuit elements of the touch sensing circuitry," Apple wrote in the filing.
Shih Chang Chang is listed as the inventor for the patent. The application was filed on September 11, 2009.
Comments
Boy, bureaucratic wheels do turn slowly (it's 4+ years since Jobs's famous '200 patents' quip). But it's nice to know that they do turn!
visual voicemail is fair but the touch screen I think they are just taking advantage of the broken system now.
Remember, a patent is not just the words of its title: it?s the whole document; which contains, in this case, a specific method for making a touchscreen thinner. THAT innovation is what is patented here, not the general concept of ?touch screen."
Remember, a patent is not just the words of its title: it?s the whole document; which contains, in this case, a specific method for making a touchscreen thinner. THAT innovation is what is patented here, not the general concept of ?touch screen."
+1 Agree!
With visual voicemail I could delete them all or listen to just the ones I wanted to. I think it was on par with touch controls as a revolutionary feature of the iPhone.
I remember hearing about and than seeing the visual voicemail. I still remember how it completely blew me away.
I didn't think it was all that impressive. PhoneValet had been doing it since 2002 and you could even email or import your individual messages into iTunes. I had a legal case, and it was really cool being able to simply take my voicemail tracks in iTunes as evidence.
Before that, going back to 1993, Apple had visual voicemail with their GeoPort Macs, starting with the Quadra 840av and Centris 660av.
The iPhone was cool with the touch interface, but really nothing more than how else you would implement visual voicemail within the touch interface.
I remember hearing about and than seeing the visual voicemail. I still remember how it completely blew me away. Voicamail used to be a way to charge you money for listening to your voicemails in order they arrived just to get to the one you really want or worse yet just to find out they were all spam.
With visual voicemail I could delete them all or listen to just the ones I wanted to. I think it was on par with touch controls as a revolutionary feature of the iPhone.
Selecting from a list is hardly revolutionary. It is a standard GUI component. The only thing different here is it is being used for voice mail rather than email or songs in an album or files in a directory ...
This really doesn't justify being a new patent. It just more evidence of how broken the software patent system is.
Selecting from a list is hardly revolutionary. It is a standard GUI component. The only thing different here is it is being used for voice mail rather than email or songs in an album or files in a directory ...
This really doesn't justify being a new patent. It just more evidence of how broken the software patent system is.
Definately a broken system. How anyone can call this innovative I do not know.
THe touch Screen patent is a different story. That is far more innovative, although I think you should be only able to patent something that has been demonstrated as a working prototype, particularly when it is about embedign one technology in another - standard way of making things smaller.
I didn't think it was all that impressive. PhoneValet had been doing it since 2002 and you could even email or import your individual messages into iTunes. I had a legal case, and it was really cool being able to simply take my voicemail tracks in iTunes as evidence.
Before that, going back to 1993, Apple had visual voicemail with their GeoPort Macs, starting with the Quadra 840av and Centris 660av.
True, but on a mobile phone?
This system on a mobile phone is far more relevant because we pay for both airtime and data.
I suppose Apple should take this as a compliment. I was in Walmart the other day marveling at how so many of the laptops followed design cues which I first saw in Apple's devices. That little gutter around the keyboard, the 'chicklet' keyboard design, the black bevel around the screen, the angled hinge design.
Apple leads the way time and time again with these concepts. In a world full of copy-cats, rip off artists, and Chinamen with fake Apple stores, should it not be granted to Apple occasionally that THEY were the first? That they were the leader in their field and deserve protection of their intellectual property? In modern market full of duplicates, it is easy to gawk at a simple patent. But the incredibly slow rate at which the de facto* government grants patents should not affect our judgement.
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*De facto (di ˈfaktō) Government: One that maintains itself by a display of force against the will of the rightful legal government and is successful, at least temporarily, in overturning the institutions of the rightful legal government by setting up its own in lieu thereof. Wortham v. Walker, 133 Tex. 255, 128 S.W.2d 1138, 1145
http://www.ncrepublic.org
It seems, most people read the title of the patent and like to claim how vague or obvious it is and it shouldn't patentable. The fact of the matter is, patents must describe, in detail, the method and implementation of achieving the end result.
I can apply for a patent for, "Method and apparatus for trapping a mouse", and so could another 1,000 people. We could all be granted a patent, because the there are many, many different ways to build a mouse trap.
Furthermore, I'd like to point out that software patents come under scrutiny most often because it may not be so obvious how the offender achieved the end result, so anyone holding a patent that describes the same thing, would have to defend their patent and ask/force the other party to show how it was implemented, and unfortunately this usually means dragging someone into court.
Where the system is being abused, is by squatters, companies that have no desire to create anything with the IP they posses, they're just hanging onto it. With the hopes that they'll someday be able to sue someone. So far, in case people haven't noticed, all of Apple's lawsuits are for IP they actually use.
visual voicemail is fair but the touch screen I think they are just taking advantage of the broken system now.
Really? I see it as exactly the opposite. The patent dealing with pushing the touch sensitivity into the same physical layer of the display as the pixel circuitry seems like a clear-cut case of an appropriate use of the patent system.
There's going to be much more appetite for debate about the legitimacy of the visual voicemail patent.
I can apply for a patent for, "Method and apparatus for trapping a mouse", and so could another 1,000 people. We could all be granted a patent, because the there are many, many different ways to build a mouse trap.
The problem with the visual voicemail patent is: If claim 1 of the patent is held to be valid, then any visual voicemail system on a portable electronic device that employs any sort visual list of voicemail messages selectable by any sort of touch, which also allows for random seeking through the voicemail message by way of touching a progress bar, is infringing no matter how it was implemented behind the scenes.
Every possible implementation that involves a visual list of touch-selectable messages and a touch-adjustable progress bar allowing for random seeking within a message during playback would infringe upon this patent.
Get rid of the touch-adjustable progress bar, and suddenly you might not be infringing upon claim 1 of this patent.
But given the prior knowledge of GUIs involving touch interfaces, is the addition of a touch-sensitive progress bar allowing the user to randomly fast-forward and rewind a message during playback really such a significant innovation, that it deserves to qualify as non-obvious to somebody well versed in the field? Even by 2007 standards?
But given the prior knowledge of GUIs involving touch interfaces, is the addition of a touch-sensitive progress bar allowing the user to randomly fast-forward and rewind a message during playback really such a significant innovation, that it deserves to qualify as non-obvious to somebody well versed in the field? Even by 2007 standards?
By current standards in applying the 'obvious' test this will probably stand, it's certainly no worse than the Personal Audio patent that Apple lost to a while back.
The only solution is to campaign for an end to the patenting of software.
Funny, I recall that when the iPhone first came out some hater on this forum said something to the effect that if visual voice mail represented the innovation that Apple was bringing to smart phones, it was a fail.
I can get around that by having the messages emailed to myself where each voice mail will be contained in an email. That still isn't as nice, as the identifying information other then the phone number, is not listed.
Apple's invention absolutely deserves a patent. As obvious as it might seem after the fact, nobody was doing it on the mobile phone prior to the iPhone. Amazon got a patent for one click purchasing, which also seems obvious. Apple licenses that patent.
Selecting from a list is hardly revolutionary. It is a standard GUI component. The only thing different here is it is being used for voice mail rather than email or songs in an album or files in a directory ...
This really doesn't justify being a new patent. It just more evidence of how broken the software patent system is.
Apple's patent goes well beyond simply fast forwarding and rewinding based on a touch interface.
But given the prior knowledge of GUIs involving touch interfaces, is the addition of a touch-sensitive progress bar allowing the user to randomly fast-forward and rewind a message during playback really such a significant innovation, that it deserves to qualify as non-obvious to somebody well versed in the field? Even by 2007 standards?
Apple's invention absolutely deserves a patent. As obvious as it might seem after the fact, nobody was doing it on the mobile phone prior to the iPhone. Amazon got a patent for one click purchasing, which also seems obvious. Apple licenses that patent.
Obvious after the fact? Select an item from a list has been around since the early days of graphical user interfaces.
One click purchasing is another example of a patent that should never have been granted. At last the EU were sensible enough to reject Amazon's patent application.