Two year-old iPhone nano patent draws headlines again
A dated patent filing for an iPhone nano concept has again garnered attention and inspired speculation in numerous media outlets, after the concept re-appeared in new Australian documents.
First revealed in a U.S. patent filing discovered by AppleInsider two years ago, the concept shows a multi-sided device with a LCD display on one side, and a touch- and force-sensitive interface on its back.
The idea aims to eliminate the problem of fingers getting in the the way of the screen. It would also negate the problem of fingerprint smudges, the application reads.
"A force-sensitive touch-surface is provided on a first or back-side surface of the device through which a user provides input (e.g., cursor manipulation and control element selection/activation)," the company wrote. "On a second or front-side surface, a display element is used to present one or more control elements and a cursor that is controlled through manipulation of the back-side touch-surface.
According to the filing, when the device is activated or placed into an operational state where it is appropriate, control elements (e.g., soft keys and menus) are displayed on the display element. The soft keys may be opaque or transparent (so as not to occlude prior displayed information such as a video presentation, a picture, a graphic or textual information). The displayed cursor would identify where on the back-side touch-surface the user has their finger.
"When the cursor is positioned over the desired control element/soft key (i.e., spatially overlapping on the display element), the user selects or activates the control element by applying pressure to the force-sensitive touch-surface with their finger," Apple explained. "Accordingly, the invention provides a means to operate a hand-held electronic device with one hand, wherein cursor movement and control element selection/activation may be accomplished without lifting one's finger. "
While the fundamentals of the patent can't be ruled out in regards to possible applications in future products, the notion of the iPhone nano as depicted appears to be a discarded one -- especially with a $99 iPhone 3G. All signs appear to indicate that Apple has since abandoned any notion of making a cheaper smaller phone
For more on the 2007 patent, read AppleInsider's coverage when the story first broke.
First revealed in a U.S. patent filing discovered by AppleInsider two years ago, the concept shows a multi-sided device with a LCD display on one side, and a touch- and force-sensitive interface on its back.
The idea aims to eliminate the problem of fingers getting in the the way of the screen. It would also negate the problem of fingerprint smudges, the application reads.
"A force-sensitive touch-surface is provided on a first or back-side surface of the device through which a user provides input (e.g., cursor manipulation and control element selection/activation)," the company wrote. "On a second or front-side surface, a display element is used to present one or more control elements and a cursor that is controlled through manipulation of the back-side touch-surface.
According to the filing, when the device is activated or placed into an operational state where it is appropriate, control elements (e.g., soft keys and menus) are displayed on the display element. The soft keys may be opaque or transparent (so as not to occlude prior displayed information such as a video presentation, a picture, a graphic or textual information). The displayed cursor would identify where on the back-side touch-surface the user has their finger.
"When the cursor is positioned over the desired control element/soft key (i.e., spatially overlapping on the display element), the user selects or activates the control element by applying pressure to the force-sensitive touch-surface with their finger," Apple explained. "Accordingly, the invention provides a means to operate a hand-held electronic device with one hand, wherein cursor movement and control element selection/activation may be accomplished without lifting one's finger. "
While the fundamentals of the patent can't be ruled out in regards to possible applications in future products, the notion of the iPhone nano as depicted appears to be a discarded one -- especially with a $99 iPhone 3G. All signs appear to indicate that Apple has since abandoned any notion of making a cheaper smaller phone
For more on the 2007 patent, read AppleInsider's coverage when the story first broke.
Comments
Some of the other sites are a little slow on the draw. There's no reason to revive this story now but for stock pumping.
Yeah, I don't understand why this has been resurrected, the article doesn't make it clear. What Australian documents? What other sites? Why's it important? Links? Little vague there, Insider.
I think this may run the risk of looking a little ho-hum today, given the variety of touchscreens out there.
I used to think this was correct too. I thought Apple was only interested in putting an iPhone out that could take advantage of App store, iTunes, etc., for revenue reasons. But I also remember when they went after the flash based MP3 players with the introduction of the shuffle...years after the iPod MP3 player and cleaned up that segment of the market, too!
Having said this, I have a sneaky suspicion Apple has cottoned onto the very lucrative "Subscription Based" business model with the iPhones and could make a pile of money with a Nano phone that just has a camera, iPod and text in it. They would sell billions world wide and have another "halo effect" entry level product! Especially with 13 yr old girls and Paris Hilton!
If it were free or $49.95 with a 2 year contract with Verizon or open it up to all carriers-piles of cabbage to be made.
Johnno (Ives) could whip this up in afternoon!
I used to think this was correct too. I thought Apple was only interested in putting an iPhone out that could take advantage of App store, iTunes, etc., for revenue reasons. But I also remember when they went after the flash based MP3 players with the introduction of the shuffle...years after the iPod MP3 player and cleaned up.
Having said this, I have a sneaky suspicion Apple has cottoned onto the "Subscription Based" business model with the iPhones and could make a pile of money with a Nano phone that just has a camera, iPod and text in it. They would clean up! Especially with 13 yr old girls and Paris Hilton!
...
I agree that it's far from a given that Apple won't make a nano phone.
I'm not sure if this design is really ready for prime time right now though. Switching the input method from the front to the back is weird enough. Making *some* inputs on the front, and *some* on the back as this patent implies is even weirder.
Maybe at a future date when there are many devices on the multi-touch platform and people are more used to touch controls this would make more sense? I mean if this is a low end phone that will be given away for essentially no cost like a flip phone, I can't see it being something this strange and difficult to operate. How would you explain to your mum or your immigrant grandmother that you use the *back* to work the wheelie thingie and the *front* to type? It just seem unnecessarily complex for the market it's aimed at.
edit hot news: Steve Jobs latest photo, sporting a beard. Poor guy, he's looking rather worse for wear.
http://www.tmz.com/2009/07/30/steve-...hoto/#comments
Seriously, this patent doesn't even look Apple to me. I think the patent is there just so Apple can sue for damages if someone else has the same idea. I think %90 of these patents are designed to protect themselves.
We are about due for some new iPod Touch's, is back to school season over yet?
edit hot news: Steve Jobs latest photo, sporting a beard. Poor guy, he's looking rather worse for wear.
http://www.tmz.com/2009/07/30/steve-...hoto/#comments
Dude, seriously...do we really need a refit every year, even every other year? Why? It's a freakin' touch screen on one side and chrome on the other. Your options are very limited. Look at the iPod over the lifetime of the product. What has changed that you need to buy one every year, besides capacity and thickness? I would say if you bought a first gen iPod you're probably good until the 5th Gen.
It should be even better now that the Touch and iPhone actually have a dedicated OS. Firmware baby! No need to buy a new device every year. Like a computer. I don't plan on updating my iPhone until they come out with something monumentally better, or it breaks.
It's just too bad you can't swap out the processors and storage.
Even the rumored Chinese model 90, that is supposed to have WiFi disconnected can have the same hardware, but use software to turn off the WiFi... instead of having separate hardware.
A dated patent filing for an iPhone nano concept has again garnered attention and inspired speculation in numerous media outlets, after the concept re-appeared in new Australian documents.[ View this article at AppleInsider.com ][/c]
Which "media outlets" and which "new Australian documents"?
Not wagging the dog, are we?
Which "media outlets" and which "new Australian documents"?
Not wagging the dog, are we?
Perhaps, but even Leo Laporte dredged it up again on a recent MacBreak.
So, talk more about the reason you're bringing this patent up again. Why is it worth mentioning today? And for starters, name the Australian documents. Are we talking about Apple documents? A newspaper article? The patent itself is (or should be) the least interesting part of this, and yet it gets 95% of the article.
iPhone Nano is NEVER going to happen IMO.
Which "media outlets" and which "new Australian documents"?
Not wagging the dog, are we?
Nope. We're not.
In 1998, early 1999. I came up with something like this. I wanted to have a fast text input device for the Palm III ( and later I became obsessed with doing this for the Handspring visor because of the cartridge slot )
Anyway... it was a device that had keys on the back side ( physical keys ) and was going to have a chorded layout.. only 18-20 keys on the back side ( depending on a usability study I was trying to do... how many keys can an average person's fingers reach in this way ) and several buttons and an n-way joypad on the front. You held it like a Sega Game Gear ( in fact my mockup was a Game Gear shell heavily "Dremeled" )
I thought I was going to make millions. hahahaha.
I worked out the whole chorded layout, and around 50 pages of design docs.
Never patented it. I figured it wasn't worth spending the money on unless I had a chance of actually successfully producing the device.
But one thing that Jobs and Co. got extremely right about the iPhone ( and this patent too ) is that fixed buttons is the wrong way to go. it extends the use of the device tremendously. It becomes a project box.... if you can think of it, you can do it.