Apple applies for "Mobile Me" trademark
Apple Computer last week asked the United States Patent and Trademark Office to grant it a trademark on the term "Mobile Me," AppleInsider has discovered.
On January 5th, the company made four separate filings on the term, covering a broad range of technologies and services.
The first filing describes Mobile Me as a computing device that could include:
"Computer services; computer data recovery; data analysis being computer services; computer programming; updating of computer software; maintenance of computer software, computer and communications networks, and computer systems; research and development of computer hardware and software; website design, creation, hosting services;"
A second filing covers the digital audio space, describing Mobile Me as:
"providing digital music from local or global communications networks, including the internet, intranets, extranets, television, mobile communication, cellular and satellite networks; operating chat rooms; publication of electronic books and journals from local or global communications networks, including the internet, intranets, extranets, television, mobile communication, cellular and satellite networks; providing on-line electronic publications; electronic games services provided from local or global communications networks, including the internet, intranets, extranets, television, mobile communication, cellular and satellite networks; information relating to music entertainment, education, interactive entertainment and education, provided on-line from local or global communications networks, including the internet, intranets, extranets, television, mobile communication, cellular and satellite networks; music library services; organizing and conducting seminars and training courses relating to science, engineering, computer systems and business"
The third filing relates Mobile Me to a consumer electronics portable device. The filing covers:
"Portable digital electronic devices and software related thereto; handheld digital electronic devices and software related thereto; digital audio players, including digital music players, and software related thereto; digital video players and software related thereto; MP3 players and software related thereto; handheld computers, personal digital assistants, pagers, electronic organizers, electronic notepads; telephones, mobile phones, videophones; computer gaming machines; microprocessors, memory boards; monitors, displays, keyboards, cables, modems, printers, disk drives; cameras, digital cameras; prerecorded computer programs for personal information management; database management software; character recognition software; telephony management software; electronic mail and messaging software, paging software; database synchronization software; computer programs for accessing, browsing and searching online databases;"
Finally, Apple also filed for a trademark on Mobile Me as service that could include:
"Telecommunication services; electronic transmission and retrieval of data, images, audio, video and documents, including text, cards, letters, messages, mail, animations, and electronic mail, over local or global communications networks, including the internet, intranets, extranets, television, mobile communication, cellular and satellite networks; electronic transmission of computer software over local or global communications networks, including the internet, intranets, extranets, television, mobile communication, cellular, and satellite networks; electronic mail services; facsimile transmission; web site portal services; providing access to databases and local or global communications networks, including the internet, intranets, extranets, television, mobile communication, cellular, and satellite networks; internet service provider services; message transmission services, namely, electronic transmission of messages; telecommunication services for the dissemination of information by mobile telephone, namely the transmission of data to mobile telephones; mobile telephone communication services."
We welcome your informed speculation in the AppleInsider Forums.
On January 5th, the company made four separate filings on the term, covering a broad range of technologies and services.
The first filing describes Mobile Me as a computing device that could include:
"Computer services; computer data recovery; data analysis being computer services; computer programming; updating of computer software; maintenance of computer software, computer and communications networks, and computer systems; research and development of computer hardware and software; website design, creation, hosting services;"
A second filing covers the digital audio space, describing Mobile Me as:
"providing digital music from local or global communications networks, including the internet, intranets, extranets, television, mobile communication, cellular and satellite networks; operating chat rooms; publication of electronic books and journals from local or global communications networks, including the internet, intranets, extranets, television, mobile communication, cellular and satellite networks; providing on-line electronic publications; electronic games services provided from local or global communications networks, including the internet, intranets, extranets, television, mobile communication, cellular and satellite networks; information relating to music entertainment, education, interactive entertainment and education, provided on-line from local or global communications networks, including the internet, intranets, extranets, television, mobile communication, cellular and satellite networks; music library services; organizing and conducting seminars and training courses relating to science, engineering, computer systems and business"
The third filing relates Mobile Me to a consumer electronics portable device. The filing covers:
"Portable digital electronic devices and software related thereto; handheld digital electronic devices and software related thereto; digital audio players, including digital music players, and software related thereto; digital video players and software related thereto; MP3 players and software related thereto; handheld computers, personal digital assistants, pagers, electronic organizers, electronic notepads; telephones, mobile phones, videophones; computer gaming machines; microprocessors, memory boards; monitors, displays, keyboards, cables, modems, printers, disk drives; cameras, digital cameras; prerecorded computer programs for personal information management; database management software; character recognition software; telephony management software; electronic mail and messaging software, paging software; database synchronization software; computer programs for accessing, browsing and searching online databases;"
Finally, Apple also filed for a trademark on Mobile Me as service that could include:
"Telecommunication services; electronic transmission and retrieval of data, images, audio, video and documents, including text, cards, letters, messages, mail, animations, and electronic mail, over local or global communications networks, including the internet, intranets, extranets, television, mobile communication, cellular and satellite networks; electronic transmission of computer software over local or global communications networks, including the internet, intranets, extranets, television, mobile communication, cellular, and satellite networks; electronic mail services; facsimile transmission; web site portal services; providing access to databases and local or global communications networks, including the internet, intranets, extranets, television, mobile communication, cellular, and satellite networks; internet service provider services; message transmission services, namely, electronic transmission of messages; telecommunication services for the dissemination of information by mobile telephone, namely the transmission of data to mobile telephones; mobile telephone communication services."
We welcome your informed speculation in the AppleInsider Forums.
Comments
Apple's systems design is all folding into place... Hardware and software perfectly integrated across wireless, web, cellular... I could imagine Apple hitting $200/share by next year!... Yow!
Originally posted by ThinkExpensive
Is this refering to a new Mac Mini like product, or is this more specifically for a totally new service/hardware/music store/movie store?
Did you not notice the word "mobile"?
Sounds great..hope whatever it is comes to fruition.
Originally posted by SpamSandwich
OMG. This is absolutely huge. "...computer and communications networks...", etc., etc., etc. Very big news.
Apple's systems design is all folding into place... Hardware and software perfectly integrated across wireless, web, cellular... I could imagine Apple hitting $200/share by next year!... Yow!
anyone notice this is almost a verbatim description of their filing for the trademark "gigawire" a few years ago? 'cause i did.
Originally posted by NOFEER
what about iphone and a tivo like service that integrates with a phone, smartphone etc. what if apple has it's own branded mobile service (s) apple mobile/ wireless
that sounds brilliant to me.
Mobile definitely implies some sort of phone.
Apple files for 'Vingle' trademark
Originally posted by DeaPeaJay
Will Mobile Me play Vingles?
Apple files for 'Vingle' trademark
That's entirely possible, seeing as Vingles are "Video Singles" and the term is actively being used in the iTunes Music Store right now. On the front page there was something about an exclusive Pussycat Dolls Vingle when I checked yesterday.
Originally posted by DeaPeaJay
Will Mobile Me play Vingles?
Apple files for 'Vingle' trademark
I cannot imagine a world where people will want to ask for, send, receive, trade, seek out, or desire something called a "vingle". Bleecchhhh! The name is absolutely horrendous. I could come up with ten more sensible names without even blinking... but then, Apple's marketing team wouldn't be doing THEIR job. \
Originally posted by dan.blanchard
That's entirely possible, seeing as Vingles are "Video Singles" and the term is actively being used in the iTunes Music Store right now. On the front page there was something about an exclusive Pussycat Dolls Vingle when I checked yesterday.
Your're right. How terrible. This one musta slipped past the Steve. Remember, the term podcasting was not created by Apple. They should be looking to the users to create it's name. Noone I know is into vingles. Ptooey!
Oh, and just found this...it was coined by the English.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vingle
Doesn't this constitute prior art? It should be in the public domain, or the property of the DJ's/VJ's that coined it.
Originally posted by dan.blanchard
That's entirely possible, seeing as Vingles are "Video Singles" and the term is actively being used in the iTunes Music Store right now. On the front page there was something about an exclusive Pussycat Dolls Vingle when I checked yesterday.
Oh cool! Is that what a Vingle is? I see it on the music store right now.
Thanks for the enlightenment!
Originally posted by DeaPeaJay
Oh cool! Is that what a Vingle is? I see it on the music store right now.
Thanks for the enlightenment!
This is totally the 8 lb 10" screen Ipod!!!!!!
Originally posted by DeaPeaJay
Oh cool! Is that what a Vingle is? I see it on the music store right now.
Thanks for the enlightenment!
"Vingle" is no different than a "music video". Perhaps it's Apple's attempt to create some perceived consumer value before MTV/Microsquish uses it. I stand by my previous comments... I don't care who coined it. It's just as awkward as MacBook. Both very mouth-unfriendly trade names.
Originally posted by SpamSandwich
Your're right. How terrible. This one musta slipped past the Steve. Remember, the term podcasting was not created by Apple. They should be looking to the users to create it's name. Noone I know is into vingles. Ptooey!
Oh, and just found this...it was coined by the English.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vingle
Doesn't this constitute prior art? It should be in the public domain, or the property of the DJ's/VJ's that coined it.
If you use the word for a description of a product or service that is far removed from the original meaning, then no.
Since a trademark can't have prior "art", as it isn't defind that way, it isn't a problem.
I'm not fond of it myself, but, then, I'm not fond of "so fun" either, but it seems to have become part of the language.
Originally posted by Gene Clean
Is there anything this thing does not cover?
...But is it Crazy Delicious?
http://www.crazydelish.com