Perhaps this isn’t related to the iSlate at all, but the timing is eerily coincidental.
A company called RPO, Inc. has filed for a trademark for “Digital Waveguide Touch” that encompasses a new multi-touch and stylus-based screen technology.
Perhaps this isn’t related to the iSlate at all, but the timing is eerily coincidental.
A company called RPO, Inc. has filed for a trademark for “Digital Waveguide Touch” that encompasses a new multi-touch and stylus-based screen technology.
In the Good and Services section of the trademark filing, there are these very, very interesting claims.
Let’s take them in order of appearance:
IC 009. US 021 023 026 036 038. G & S:
Computers; computer software, namely, database management software, electronic mail and messaging software, Internet browser software, paging software, database synchronization software, software for accessing, browsing and searching online databases,
So far, that’s more or less what the iPhone does.
I’m back earlier than Saturday with a new post because of the breaking news from MacRumors and TechCrunch.
If Apple’s iTablet turns out to be called the iSlate, I will kick myself black and blue.
Because I saw that trademark filing months ago.
What confused me was the applicant:
(APPLICANT) Slate Computing (USA) LLC LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY DELAWARE Corporation Trust Center 1209 Orange Street Wilmington DELAWARE 19801
I didn’t delve further than that because apparently I’m the only damned person on the Internet to remember another company called Slate!
I remembered reading all about it at various times during the years I got Pen Computing magazine!
In early 1990, I co-founded a new, venture capital funded, software development company, Slate Corporation, along with other personal computer industry veterans. Slate’s mission was to develop applications software for pen computers. With the lackluster sale of pen computers, Slate closed its doors after four years, and I returned to Software Garden.
The “I” in that quote is Dan Bricklin, who created VisiCalc.
And its trademark filing had this as applicant:
(REGISTRANT) Slate Corporation CORPORATION DELAWARE 15035 North 73rd Street Building D, Floor 2 Scottsdale ARIZONA 85260
A Delaware address just like a Delaware address for the iSlate filing!
And there’s already an iPhone app called iSlate!
Plus there’s a MicroSlate corporation!
After the break, Slate Corporation’s trademark filings.
Offline until Saturday. Enjoy the pretty picture of London, England. Taken with an iPhone by @zainyk.
As I said in a prior post, I have people who alert me to things that pop up on TV in England.
This time I got a rogue recommendation from @ghostfinder who swears up and down that I first recommended this to him — even though I swear I’ve never seen it before.
It’s a six-episode series called Misfits. It’s recently finished running on a pay-TV channel called E4.
After the break, the reveal.
This is the press release:
ACCESS Announces NetFront™Book Viewer EPUB Edition v1.0
Tokyo, Japan, December 22, 2009 – ACCESS CO., LTD., a global provider of advanced software technologies to the mobile and beyond-PC markets, today announced NetFront™ Book Viewer EPUB Edition v1.0, a mobile e-book reader that displays both vertical text for character-based Asian languages, such as Chinese, Korean and Japanese, and traditional horizontal text. NetFront Book Viewer EPUB Edition v1.0 supports EPUB, the free and open e-book standard developed by the International Digital Publishing Forum (IDPF). NetFront Book Viewer EPUB Edition v1.0 enables operators, mobile manufacturers and content providers to utilize the vast library of existing e-book content compliant with EPUB, making it easier for them to enter the expanding e-book business in Asian markets.
NetFront Book Viewer EPUB Edition v1.0 is based on ACCESS’ popular NetFront™ Browser, the world’s leading full Internet browser for mobile and beyond-PC devices, and includes enhanced features such as the ability for users to highlight body text, insert bookmarks and add notations while reading. NetFront Book Viewer EPUB Edition v1.0 joins ACCESS’ lineup of e-publishing solutions that includes NetFront™ Book Viewer v2.0* for text and comics, NetFront™ Book Builder* authoring tool and Keitai Booker’s™* Japanese e-book store.
“The global e-book market is expanding rapidly,” said Tomihisa Kamada, president, CEO and co-founder of ACCESS. “ACCESS has proven expertise in this market with the e-publishing ecosystem we have developed in Japan that provides not only software tools for authoring and viewing, but also Keitai Booker’s e-book store as a delivery solution. We intend to leverage our cutting-edge mobile technologies and industry experience to help grow e-book markets around the world.”
NetFront Book Viewer EPUB Edition v1.0 will be available for operators, handset manufacturers and content providers in global markets in early 2010.
This could be significant. Many mobile phones already run the NetFront browser. Adding ePub capability could be a selling point for that kind of cellphone.
ACCESS touts that 800 million phones/devices have its NetFront browser on them: ACCESS NetFront™ Deployments Surpass 800 Million Worldwide
ACCESS is also known for purchasing PalmSource and turning it into the ACCESS Linux Platform, an operating system on the ELSE phone.
Ever since the rumors stated the iTablet would have a ten-inch screen, I’ve been uneasy about that possibility.
In one of those rumors, it was asserted that Apple was going with ten inches due to a decree by Steve Jobs himself that anything less was too small.
The more I thought about that, the more nonsensical it became.
First of all, Steve Jobs has seen what the iPhone has done to the Internet.
Second of all, what we think about as a “proper” screen size is about to undergo a revolution.
Just write something like this:
Regardless of which one it is, the key takeaway is that Publishers who think they can sell Books as Apps in the App Store are mistaken. It hasn’t happened so far and it might never happen.
From a silly ridiculous post at Kindle Review.
Which shortsightedly ignores the very real possibility of future Apple hardware — and software updates — containing reading software built-in as a standard feature.
Suddenly, everyone can buy digital books. Not just those who make the effort to determine which of the confusing selection of programs to download right now.
In her resignation letter, this is the key sentence:
And now you have sold us down the river.
Precisely!
Now where the hell is the rest of the membership to overthrow the sellout bastards?
Previously here:
And You Will Trust Google With All Of Our Books?
This Is Print Publishing’s Final Warning
Mark The Words Of Dave Winer
Sergey Brin: Also Absolutely Inexcusably Clueless
Google Thinks It Owns Our Books!
The First Step Towards A Google Book Search Solution
Google Always Had POD Planned
God Bless Marybeth Peters Of The Copyright Office!
Google Books Settlement Notes #2
Tomorrow: Google Books Settlement Deadline For Writers
Cooler Adds Google’s One Million ePubs Of Crap!
Google Books Settlement Notes #1
Google’s Great Writer Rip-Off
Google’s One Million eBooks Of Crap!
The Capitulation Of Print Publishing
Reject The Google Book Search Settlement!