6.931 Development of Inventions and Creative Ideas Spring 2008
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2016 Ncta Intx May 16Th & 17Th
A Center for Law, 2016 NCTA INTX Technology, and Entrepreneurship ACADEMIC WORKSHOP at the University Silicon of Colorado MAY 16TH & 17TH latirons WORKSHOP PARTICIPANTS Workshop Locations Yochai Benkler, Professor of Law, Harvard University Babette E. Boliek, Associate Professor, Pepperdine University School of Law Monday, May 16, 2016 Adam Candeub, Professor, Michigan State University College of Law Samberg Conference Center - MIT David Clark, Professor, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 6th Floor, Dining Room 5 & 6 Stacey Dogan, Professor, Boston University School of Law MIT Chang Building (E52) Carolyn Gideon, Assistant Professor of International Communication and Technology 50 Memorial Drive Policy and Director of Hitachi Center for Technology and International Affairs, The Cambridge, MA 02139 Fletcher School, Tufts University Ray Gifford, Senior Fellow, Silicon Flatirons, University of Colorado Shane Greenstein, Professor, Harvard Business School Tuesday, May 17, 2016 Christiaan Hogendorn, Associate Professor of Economics, Wesleyan University Boston Convention and John B. Horrigan, Senior Researcher, Pew Research Center Expo Center Gus Hurwitz, Assistant Professor, University of Nebraska College of Law 415 Summer Street Roslyn Layton, PhD Fellow, Aalborg University Boston, MA 02210 William Lehr, Research Scientist/CSAIL, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Directions & Parking Daniel Lyons, Associate Professor, Boston College Law School Information John Mayo, Professor of Economics, Business and Public Policy, Georgetown University -
Visions of Electric Media Electric of Visions
TELEVISUAL CULTURE Roberts Visions of Electric Media Ivy Roberts Visions of Electric Media Television in the Victorian and Machine Ages Visions of Electric Media Televisual Culture Televisual culture encompasses and crosses all aspects of television – past, current and future – from its experiential dimensions to its aesthetic strategies, from its technological developments to its crossmedial extensions. The ‘televisual’ names a condition of transformation that is altering the coordinates through which we understand, theorize, intervene, and challenge contemporary media culture. Shifts in production practices, consumption circuits, technologies of distribution and access, and the aesthetic qualities of televisual texts foreground the dynamic place of television in the contemporary media landscape. They demand that we revisit concepts such as liveness, media event, audiences and broadcasting, but also that we theorize new concepts to meet the rapidly changing conditions of the televisual. The series aims at seriously analyzing both the contemporary specificity of the televisual and the challenges uncovered by new developments in technology and theory in an age in which digitization and convergence are redrawing the boundaries of media. Series editors Sudeep Dasgupta, Joke Hermes, Misha Kavka, Jaap Kooijman, Markus Stauff Visions of Electric Media Television in the Victorian and Machine Ages Ivy Roberts Amsterdam University Press Cover illustration: ‘Professor Goaheadison’s Latest,’ Fun, 3 July 1889, 6. Cover design: Coördesign, Leiden -
Searchable PDF Index
TELEPHONE COLLECTORS INTERNATIONAL Telephone Collectors International is an organization of telephone collectors, hobbyists and historians who are helping to preserve the history of the telecommunications industry through the collection of telephones and telephone related material. Our collections represent all aspects of the industry; from the very first wooden prototypes that started the industry to the technological marvels that made the automatic telephone exchange possible. If any of this interests you, we invite you to join our organization. Look around and see what we have to offer. Thanks for stopping by! Telephone Collectors International website including become a member: http://www.telephonecollectors.org/ Questions or comments about TCI? Send e-mail to [email protected] ********************************************************************************* Books Recommended by the editors: Available now ... Old-Time Telephones! Design, History, and Restoration by Ralph O. Meyer ... 264pp Soft Cover 2nd Edition, Expanded and Revised ... A Schiffer Book with Price Guide for Collectors Available at Phoneco.com or Schiffer Publishing, Ltd., 4880 Lower Valley Rd, Atglen, PA 19310 e-mail: [email protected] ********************************************************************************** Coming Soon: TELEPHONE Dials and Pushbuttons Their History, Development and Usage by Stanley Swihart ... 2 volumes, 300 pp ea. Box 2818, Dublin, CA., 94568-0818. Phone 1 (925)-829-2728, e-mail [email protected] ********************************************************************************* -
The Myth of the Sole Inventor
Michigan Law Review Volume 110 Issue 5 2012 The Myth of the Sole Inventor Mark A. Lemley Stanford Law School Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.law.umich.edu/mlr Part of the Intellectual Property Law Commons Recommended Citation Mark A. Lemley, The Myth of the Sole Inventor, 110 MICH. L. REV. 709 (2012). Available at: https://repository.law.umich.edu/mlr/vol110/iss5/1 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Michigan Law Review at University of Michigan Law School Scholarship Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Michigan Law Review by an authorized editor of University of Michigan Law School Scholarship Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. THE MYTH OF THE SOLE INVENTORt Mark A. Lemley* The theory of patent law is based on the idea that a lone genius can solve problems that stump the experts, and that the lone genius will do so only if properly incented. But the canonical story of the lone genius inventor is largely a myth. Surveys of hundreds of significant new technologies show that almost all of them are invented simultaneously or nearly simultaneous- ly by two or more teams working independently of each other. Invention appears in significant part to be a social, not an individual, phenomenon. The result is a real problem for classic theories of patent law. Our domi- nant theory of patent law doesn't seem to explain the way we actually implement that law. Maybe the problem is not with our current patent law, but with our current patent theory. -
Who Invented the Telephone?: Lawyers, Patents, and the Judgments of History
Who Invented the Telephone?: Lawyers, Patents, and the Judgments of History Christopher Beauchamp Technology and Culture, Volume 51, Number 4, October 2010, pp. 854-878 (Article) Published by The Johns Hopkins University Press DOI: 10.1353/tech.2010.0038 For additional information about this article http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/tech/summary/v051/51.4.beauchamp.html Access Provided by Princeton University at 02/10/13 1:14PM GMT 05_51.4beauchamp 854–78:03_49.3dobraszczyk 568– 10/31/10 11:04 AM Page 854 Who Invented the Telephone? Lawyers, Patents, and the Judgments of History CHRISTOPHERBEAUCHAMP Who invented the telephone? In the United States, this question has a widely known answer. Alexander Graham Bell routinely ranks among the hundred “greatest” or “most influential” Americans, whether chosen by historians or internet polls.1 His cry of “Mr. Watson—come here—I want to see you,”al- though often misquoted, is one of the best-known exclamations in Amer- ican history.2 More than one hundred and thirty years after the event, Bell and Watson’s first telephone call remains a classroom staple: a standard de- vice for teaching Americans about the nation’s inventive past, and even for placing technological change at the center of mainstream history.3 Christopher Beauchamp is the Sharswood Fellow in Law and History at the University of Pennsylvania Law School. In an earlier form, this essay received the Levinson Prize of the Society for the History of Technology. The author is grateful for the advice of Anisha Dasgupta, Martin Daunton, Richard John, Robert MacDougall, Christine MacLeod, John Staudenmaier, and four anonymous referees for T&C. -
Luis Rosario Albert Estado, Empresa Y
REDES ESTADO, EMPRESA Y TELECOMUNICACIONES EN PUERTO RICO LUIS ROSARIO ALBERT JuntaREGLAMENTADORA de Telecomunicaciones DE PUERTO RICO Para ver este documento como un libro ajuste el formato en Adobe Reader realizando los siguientes pasos: Adobe Reader > Ver > Presentación de Página > Vista de Dos Páginas Adobe Reader > View > Page Display > Two Page View Importante asegúrese que las siguientes opciones no estén seleccionadas: Mostrar Espacios Entre Páginas Mostrar Página de Portada en Vista de Dos Páginas Show Gaps Between Pages Show Cover Page in Two Page View REDES: ESTADO, EMPRESA Y TELECOMUNICACIONES EN PUERTO RICO © Junta Reglamentadora de Telecomunicaciones de Puerto Rico Todos los derechos reservados. Prohibida la reproducción parcial o total de este libro. Primera edición: Noviembre 2016 Investigación/Derechos morales Luis Rosario Albert Edición/Corrección de textos Maria Eugenia Hidalgo Coordinadora de producción Karen Garnik, Beyond Branding Communications Diseño gráfico/Montaje Alberto Rigau & Edna Isabel Acosta, Estudio Interlínea Diseño de gráficas Stephanie Rodríguez, Estudio Interlínea Impresión Model Offset Printing ISBN: 978-0-9981550-0-5 Impreso y encuadernado en Humacao, Puerto Rico. Fotos páginas 1-7: AGPR Foto páginas 8-9: El Mundo, UPR AbreviAturAs en ilustrAciones El Mundo, UPR Colección del periódico El Mundo, Biblioteca Digital Puertorriqueña, Universidad de Puerto Rico AGPR Archivo General de Puerto Rico FLMM Fundación Luis Muñoz Marín FRHC Fundación Rafael Hernández Colón ACPR Autoridad de Comunicaciones de -
Short Skirts, Telephonoscopes and Ancient Locomotives
Junctions volume 2 issue 2 9 ! Short Skirts, Telephonoscopes and Ancient Locomotives Albert Robida’s Vision of the Twentieth Century Lotte Kremer ABSTRACT Albert Robida (1848-1926) was a French illustrator, caricaturist and novelist. In 1883 he wrote and illustrated Le Vingtième Siècle, a futuristic novel which gives us a look at twentieth-century life. This book is a science-fiction landmark, with its ambivalent attitude towards technology. In his development of such a detailed and coherent aesthetic of the future, Robida was the first true science fiction illustrator. Robida’s illustrations are an integral part of the novel and are thus worth analysing as a means of expression. I take a closer look at the illustrations, analysing their content and the way they interact with the text. I especially focus on the way they relate to Robida’s own historical context. First, the novel’s place in the science fiction genre is discussed, then its place in developments in illustration. Toward the end, the fashion, architecture, technology and general culture is taken into account. This provides the answers to the central question: how does Robida’s imagined future fit within his time? The novel acutely describes the mass effects of technological change. Robida creates a world akin to an anti-utopia. He conveys his ambivalence towards this progress and its repercussions through the fate of monuments, unthinking historicising fads and the effects of new technology on daily life. He creates a fleshed out world where his contemporary culture is mixed with a futuristic one. His illustrations contribute to this realistic world, which the reader explores from within. -
Patent Alienability and Its Discontents
Patent Alienability and Its Discontents Hannibal Travis* I. INTRODUCTION ................................................................................. 110 II. LEGAL AND ECONOMIC THEORIES OF ASSET ALIENABILITY .......... 114 A. The Alienability of Property in Economic History and Theory ........................................................................ 114 B. The Contemporary Importance of Patent Alienability ....................................................................... 119 III. CRITIQUES OF PATENT ALIENATION AND MONETIZATION ............. 123 A. Brief History of Patent Reform ........................................ 123 B. The America Invents Act and Efforts To Reduce Infringers’ Patent Licensing Costs ................................... 125 C. The Innovation Act as a Measure Aimed Directly at Patent Alienability ............................................................ 127 IV. ASSESSING PROPOSED REFORMS TO PATENT LAW DESIGNED TO PREVENT “ABUSE” ..................................................................... 128 A. Identifying Exaggerated Claims of Harm to Patent Infringers .......................................................................... 128 B. Highlighting the Role of Patent Licensors in the Research and Development Process ................................. 136 C. Reaffirming Settled Law and Legitimate Expectations Under the Patent Act of 1952 ..................... 139 1. Abstract Method or Process Patents .............................. 139 2. Imitative, Inevitable, or Obvious Improvements .......... -
65 F1 86, Federal Reporter
86 "J'EDERALBEPORTER, vol. 65. you beyond a rea$onabledoubt of the truth of the charge laid against the defendant, then your duty is to return a verdict of not guilty~ The policy of the government in regard to pensions and the manage- ment of the pension office in conducting the affairs comtnitted to its charge are not in i$sue in this case. The question for your decision is whether or not the defendant is guilty of the charge set forth in, the second count of the indictment. Ifthe evidence shows his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, so say' by your verdict. If the govern- m(:'nt has failed to prove the truth of the charge beyond a reasonable- doubt, find the defendant not guilty. The case is one of importance. Consider it impartially, dispassionately. Give to both parties the benefit of the soundest and clearest judgment you can bring to bear' upon thequestiQns submitted to you,and.return the verdict which in your bel:lt judgment the evidence demands and warrants, viewed iu the light of theinstructions I have given you upon the law. llNITED STATES ... AMERICAN BELL TEL. CO. et aI. (Circuit Court, D. Massachusetts. December 18, 1894.) No.841. 1. PATENTS-Two PATENTS FOR SAME 'INVENTION - TELEPHONE TRANSMITTER., Patent; No. 463,569, issued November 17, 1891, to Emile Berliner, as; assignor to the American Bell Telephone Company, .for combined tele- graph' and telephone, is for a device for transmitting articulate speech, which is identical with the device for the same purpose covered by patent No. 238,969, issued to Emile Berliner November 2, 1880, for electric tele- phone, and is 'void. -
THE INVENTIVE THINKING CURRICULUM PROJECT an Outreach Program of the United States Patent and Trademark Office
Inventive Thinking Page 1 of 53 THE INVENTIVE THINKING CURRICULUM PROJECT An Outreach Program of The United States Patent and Trademark Office The activities featured in this project are appropriate for all student populations http://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/ac/ahrpa/opa/projxl/invthink/invthink.htm 8/24/2004 Inventive Thinking Page 2 of 53 Disclaimer This report was prepared as a project of the U.S. Government. Neither the U.S. Government nor any agency thereof, nor any of their employees, makes any warranty, express or implied, or assumes any legal liability or responsibility for the accuracy, completeness, or usefulness of any information, apparatus, product, or process disclosed, or represents that its use would not infringe privately owned rights. Reference herein to any specific commercial product, process, or service by trade name, trademark, manufacturer, or otherwise does not necessarily constitute or imply its endorsement, recommendation, or favoring by the U.S. Government or any agency thereof. The views and opinions of authors expressed herein do not necessarily state or reflect those of the U.S. Government or any agency thereof. CONTENTS Page Introduction. 1 Activities: #1 Introducing Inventive Thinking 9 #2 Practicing the Creative Part of Inventive Thinking. 11 #3 Practicing Inventive Thinking with the Class 14 #4 Developing an Invention Idea. 16 #5 Brainstorming for Creative Solutions. 18 #6 Practicing the Critical Parts of Inventive Thinking. 19 #7 Completing the Invention 20 #8 Naming the Invention 21 #9 Optional Marketing Activities 23 #10 Parent Involvement 25 #11 Young Inventors' Day 26 #12 Enrichment: Stories about Great Thinkers and Inventors 27 Copymasters 39 http://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/ac/ahrpa/opa/projxl/invthink/invthink.htm 8/24/2004 Inventive Thinking Page 3 of 53 Appendix 61 INTRODUCTION Since the early 1980s, the U.S. -
Emile Berliner by Bob Estreich Lexander Graham Bell Invented the There He Saw Bell's Telephones
Emile Berliner by Bob Estreich lexander Graham Bell invented the There he saw Bell's telephones. There was telephone. Well, he invented one that general amazement at the new device, but Aworked, but not very well. Bell's eventual Berliner noticed its faults as well. Although the success rested on the work of other inventors Centennial phone and its later derivatives were who fixed the problems or found a better way. adequate receivers if they had a strong enough Emil (he later changed it to Emile) Berliner was signal, they were poor transmitters. They were one such. faint, noisy and clumsy. Watson described using the phones as like holding a packing case in Berliner was born in Hanover, Germany on May each hand. They were based on the induction 20, 1851. In 1870 he left Hanover for the United principle - a varying electric current passed States. He had been offered a job with a family through a coil and influenced a nearby friend, and he left Germany to avoid military diaphragm (receiver), or the movement of the service. He worked as a shop assistant for some diaphragm influenced the current flowing years, then got a job as cleanup man in the through the coil (transmitter). The signal laboratory of Constantine Fahlberg, who dropped off quickly with increasing distance. invented saccharine. This fired his interest in The receiver part was also the microphone, so science and inventing. He furthered his any outside noise interfered with the received education at a night school run by the Cooper voice. Institute, and learnt basic physics from a textbook given to him by a local drugstore Berliner came up with two improvements. -
The Master Switch: the Rise and Fall of Information Empires Free
FREE THE MASTER SWITCH: THE RISE AND FALL OF INFORMATION EMPIRES PDF Tim Wu | 368 pages | 29 Nov 2011 | Vintage Books | 9780307390998 | English | New York, NY, United States The Master Switch: The Rise and Fall of Information Empires by Tim Wu, Paperback | Barnes & Noble® Goodreads helps you keep track of books you want to read. Want to Read saving…. Want to Read Currently Reading Read. Other editions. Enlarge cover. Error rating book. Refresh and try again. Open Preview See a Problem? Details if other :. Thanks for telling us about the problem. Return to Book Page. In this age of an open Internet, it is easy to forget that every American information industry, beginning with the telephone, has eventually been taken captive by some ruthless monopoly or cartel. With all our media now traveling a single network, an unprecedented potential is building for centralized control over what Americans see and hear. Could history repeat itself wi In this age of an open Internet, it is easy to forget that every American information industry, beginning with the telephone, has eventually been taken captive by some ruthless monopoly or cartel. Could history repeat itself with the next industrial consolidation? Each invited unrestricted use and enterprising experiment until some would-be mogul battled his way to total domination. Here are stories of an uncommon will to power, the power over information: Adolph Zukor, who took a technology once used as commonly as YouTube is today and made it the exclusive prerogative of a kingdom called Hollywood. And foremost, Theodore Vail, founder of the Bell System, the greatest information empire of all time, and a capitalist whose faith in Soviet-style central planning set the course of every information industry thereafter.