Category: inventions

  • Putting Pen to Paper with Patent Innovation

    When you think about images of the first writing instruments, you envision charcoal, paint brushes and quill pens. The image of Shakespeare dipping a quill pen into an ink well come to mind. The ink smeared, it blotched and it took time to dry. You know the sign of a writer by the ink all over their hands (and their poverty, of course). The poverty part is still true, about the starving writer, right?

    There are many key inventions related to the pen, but none so significant as the ball-point pen. The most significant developments involving the ballpoint pen can be traced to Hungarian inventor László Jozsef Bíró. Stephen Brackman provides a great history of ball-point invention and the patent history at IPWatchdog.

    The reason that anyone and everyone ended up with dozens of pens is because of 

     Bic. Marcel Bich (company name was shortened to Bic) was the key player in this mass production product bringing the pen down to $1 or so per pen from hundreds of dollars per pen (converted to current price equivalents). Bic licensed the patent technology from Bíró, and also had a couple design patents.

    A great article about the evolution of the ball-point pen is presented in BBC by Stephen Dowling (Oct 29, 2020). As you read through, read through this exceptional history, think about the monks copying books by hand, and how far and how fast we have moved forward with the printing press, the pen, the mail.  All still in use today. (Well, not the original printing presses…)

    Another fun article is about other patents in the ink printing space. Here are 5 Fascinating Pen Patents at the Fun Facts section of Jet Pens. You want to read and look at the pix!:-) Here are the 5 patents:

    • Pilot Frixion Erasable Gel Ink Pen. That’s right, you write in this special ink and the eraser erases it. (Kinda, thermal makes the ink invisible.)
    • Fisher Space Pen. The pen that has pressurization, so it works up-side-down and in space.
    • Lamy Dialog 3 Fountain Pen. This fountain pen retracts and then a solid ball covers the nib so it doesn’t dry or leak.
    • Field Notes Color Cover Memo Book, Expedition Edition. This specialized book has Yupo synthetic paper that is waterproof, tear-proof and 100% recyclable. So this is not really a pen, but for a pen to work, you do need paper. You will want to take this book and your space pen on your Himalayan adventure.
    • Sakura Gelly Roll Gel Ink Pens. The ink in these pens has metallic and glitter. Since the ball-point pen works on the idea of a very smooth, even flow of ink, this is an interesting technology to achieve. 
    Even with the invent of the computer, there are times when you want to, or need to, write. Studies show that you retain information better when you right them down, even if you don’t revisit the notes. You retain better with handwritten notes than typed notes. 

    What do you think are other great pen, or writing related, inventions?
    What do you think is the next great, or not so great, invention related to the mighty pen?
  • Here Are the Biggest Crowdfunding Campaigns of 2015 – Bloomberg Business

    Here Are the Biggest Crowdfunding Campaigns of 2015 – Bloomberg Business:

    Crowdfunding really hit its stride this year with people just crowding in to jump on the bandwagon of new and innovative ideas. Of course great fundraising ideas are for books and movies, especially those that sequels or follow-ons with an established groupie base. Veronica Mars, the high-school sleuth, is and example from last year on Kickstarter. (See our blog here,)

    This years list from Bloomberg Business is very enlightening. Of course there are follow-ons to games and movies. That’s a very straightforward use of crowd funding. There are philanthropic approaches, like remodeling historic buildings. And, of course, new inventions.

    One that caught a lot of buzz is Flow Hive, that raised ~$12m for a process to put a tap into a bee hive and simply pour honey when you want some (money). This process avoids the pain and suffering of opening the hive in order to get at the honey.

    Other things that draw funding include eclectic games and exploding kittens.

    No matter how you look at it, however, the Internet (and crowdfunding) is one of the great equalizers of our lifetime. Anyone, anywhere, can raise money for a good idea; simply spread the word in the right settings.

    Now, if the idea has intellectual property protection as well (patents, copyright, trademark), then the scaleability of funding and adoption could be off-the-charts.

    ‘via Blog this’

  • Revenue Per Patent A Longstanding Question of Value for Many

    In the world of IP, there is a list of questions that never seem to be answered to the satisfaction of all particularly when there is generational change in who is running the corporation.  Foremost among the questions is what is the revenue per patent and is it worth the time, energy and resources that must be applied not only for a patent but protect in the marketplace from infringement that may result in costly litigation.  IAM presents 20 corporations with extensive patent portfolios and the revenues per patent at  http://www.iam-media.com/blog/detail.aspx?g=d37195bc-4870-406d-81cc-f9e74c6e17b8.  Among the points worth noting is that Apple has the least number of patents among the 20, but blows all away in the revenue it realizes for each patent.

    All of those listed make sizable revenues.  It is clear that the effort to patent from beginning to end is of demonstrable value to the corporation.

  • Intellectual Property @ IBM

    Intellectual Property @ IBM:

    ‘via Blog this’

    This IBM Blog article talks about US Innovation: alive and well.
    IBM blasts it outta the park again in 2011 with the most patents issued by the USPTO. These are organized by the owner of the patents, the “assignee”. See the top 50 list at IFIClaims.
    IBM had 6,180 patents issued in the US, far more than the next inventor company.
    The electronics companies from Japan and Korea were strong in the top 15.
    Here are the top US companies. Note that Microsoft is in 6th place with 2,311 patents issued. Quite a change for a company that once relied mostly on copyright for it IP protection. GE at #11 with 1,448 patents. HP dropped to 14 as the company struggles.
    The big automakers were generally in the middle of the pack with GM #18 with 1,095 patents. Apple at 39 with 676 patents (but then, not all patents are created equal). DuPont was #50 with 523 patents.
    Rank
    Grants
    Company Name
    Country
    1
    6180
    International Business Machines Corp
    United States
    6
    2311
    Microsoft Corp
    United States
    11
    1448
    General Electric Co
    United States
    14
    1308
    Hewlett-Packard Development Co L P
    United States
    16
    1244
    Intel Corp
    United States
    17
    1164
    Broadcom Corp
    United States
    18
    1095
    GM Global Technology Operations LLC
    United States
    22
    980
    Cisco Technology Inc
    United States
    24
    947
    Micron Technology Inc
    United States
    26
    923
    Qualcomm Inc
    United States
    28
    880
    Xerox Corp
    United States
    32
    794
    Texas Instruments Inc
    United States
    33
    780
    Honeywell International Inc
    United States
    35
    721
    AT&T Intellectual Property I L P
    United States
    37
    695
    Boeing Co The
    United States
    39
    676
    Apple Inc
    United States
    50
    523
    Du Pont de Nemours, E I & Co
    United States