T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
407.1 | Authorship | VAXUUM::DYER | Aiigh!!! | Thu Feb 12 1987 09:30 | 3 |
| The preceding note was written by someone at the Free Software Foundation
(Project GNU).
<_Jym_>
|
407.2 | That's not just absurd.... | FROST::HARRIMAN | Arguments...Agreements...Advice | Thu Feb 12 1987 16:34 | 22 |
| What a ludicrous thought. If "look and feel" were copyright-able
we would not have:
telephone keypads by companies other than Western Electric
QWERTY keyboards with "IBM" sculptured keys (vt100's for instance)
DEC would be in trouble; the LK201 "looks" sort of like an IBM
PC keyboard.
What about all those automobiles that "look and feel" like European
sedans?
We would never have competition without making competitive products
look and feel similar. What user (of ANYTHING) wants to learn to
use (or HAVE to learn to use) incompatible competing products???
In the software arena, they call similar products "standardized".
That's why they have standards, isn't it? So one implementation
of BASIC or COBOL or LISP or PASCAL works on another machine, right?
<flame off, for now>
/pjh
|
407.3 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | | Fri Feb 13 1987 03:54 | 18 |
| Suspension bridges.
I am afraid you will have to take that thing in San Francisco
down - it has the same look and feel as the Avon suspension bridge
(though I admit it is a little larger).
It is worth noting that copright lasts a lot longer than patents.
In Britain, a patent normally lasts 10 years, though extensions
are possible, but no extensions are granted beyond 25 years. Copyright
lasts for 100 years - it is only in the last few years that you
can reprint Dickens without paying royalties to his descendants.
Suspension bridges are certainly out of patent protection (if they
ever had any), but are possibly not out of copyright protection
(if they are copyrightable). Maybe someone from the Bristol office
can confirm the age of the Avon bridge ? :-)
Dave
|
407.4 | | GNUVAX::LIBRARIAN | Watch closely, there's a signpost up ahead... | Fri Feb 13 1987 16:06 | 9 |
|
Digital recently (last year or two) lost a suit against a company
called C. Itoh for infringing (stealing) the (you guessed it) 'look and
feel' of the VT220. It was a lot more that look and feel, if you took
the labels off the two terminals one would be hard put to tell the
difference between the two. The judge didn't buy it. 'Look and feel'
is just too intangable.
Lance
|
407.5 | | STAR::PIPER | Derrell Piper - VMS Development | Sun Feb 15 1987 11:45 | 5 |
| > difference between the two. The judge didn't buy it. 'Look and feel'
> is just too intangible.
The judge did rule though, that C. Itoh had to redo their manuals.
It seems they Xeroxed part of the DIGITAL VT200 character tables :-)
|
407.6 | C. Itoh | TLE::RMEYERS | Randy Meyers | Tue Feb 17 1987 18:15 | 11 |
| Re: C. Itoh
I seem to remember that there was a bit more than "look and feel" in
the Digital case against C. Itoh.
C. Itoh added a few extra setup options to their terminal. Remember that
the VT200 series has setup menus in several languages. So does the C.
Itoh terminal. But only for the DEC standard setup options; all their new
options are only in English.
Just like their had dumped the DEC ROMs, and had stuck in a few extra features.
|
407.7 | Apple vs. Digital Research | SHEILA::PUCKETT | Back off man! I'm a Specialist! | Mon Mar 02 1987 05:27 | 6 |
| This one is, at least to me, the Look and Feel Test Case: Apple winning a
suit against Digital Research, forcing the latter to make its GEM windowing
user interface look less like that of the Macintosh, which itself had, by
Apple's own admission, the Look and Feel of a Xerox worstation.
= Giles =
|
407.8 | | ERIS::CALLAS | So many ratholes, so little time | Mon Mar 02 1987 16:52 | 3 |
| Apple didn't win. DR settled out of court. That's *very* different.
Jon
|
407.9 | This is getting interesting | FROST::HARRIMAN | bicker,bicker,bicker | Mon Mar 02 1987 17:32 | 5 |
| I'm curious; what was the final outcome of that? Did Digital Research
end up paying money to Apple? Or was the settlement discussed?
/uninformed_in_vt.
|
407.10 | | ERIS::CALLAS | So many ratholes, so little time | Tue Mar 03 1987 08:59 | 5 |
| Yes. DR paid Apple some amount of money that I don't remember. Most
observers I read agreed that it was cheaper than paying lawyers
to fight the suit.
Jon
|
407.11 | wasn't a look and feel case | PEANO::GLASER | Steve Glaser DTN 226-7646 LKG1-2/A19 | Sat Mar 14 1987 11:57 | 7 |
| I don't think this was a look and feel case. Apple has a patent
on the pull down menu style used on the mac. While you may argue
about the validity of this patent, DR didn't want to and changed
GEM to use a different scheme (drop down menus). There may have
been money transfered as well (I don't remember).
Steveg
|
407.12 | Not only DRI | MAY20::MINOW | I need a vacation | Sun Mar 15 1987 14:39 | 13 |
| The Atari ST uses the DRI GEM desktop which, as was noted, is similar
ti the McIntosh desktop (and to the Xerox Smalltalk interface and to
the user interface in many Lisp workstations).
The agreement between DRI and Apple requires DRI to lobotomize their
implementation (windows may not overlap, for example).
Atari does not intend to change their implementation. It is rumored
that Jack Tramiel (pres. of Atari) would have no objection to being
sued by Apple.
Martin.
|
407.13 | There's lots of loose talk about this case | ERIS::CALLAS | So many ratholes, so little time | Tue Mar 17 1987 16:01 | 11 |
| re .11:
Since it never got to court, speculating about whether it would be a
look-and-feel case is precisely that, mere speculation.
Are you sure Apple has a patent on pull-down menus? I really find that
hard to believe, given all the known instances of pull-down menus long
before Apple ever did one. On the other hand, it may be a useless
patent like the one Digital has on the IF/THEN/ELSE statement.
Jon
|
407.14 | "Look and Feel" v. "Visual Copyright" | TLE::RMEYERS | Randy Meyers | Wed Mar 18 1987 16:07 | 18 |
| Re: .12
Byte reported sometime last year that one of the points of contention
between DRI and Apple was the look (I guess not the feel) of the GEM
trashcan. DRI changed the look of their trashcan when Apple told DRI
that Apple was going to aggressively protect their "visual copyright."
I wonder if the GEM trashcan immediately destroys what you place in it
because it because DRI was worried about the "feel" of the Apple trashcan?
(On the Macintosh and the Amiga you can pull files back out of the trashcan.)
DRI was somewhat vulnerable to the Apple attack because DRI still hasn't
recovered from their disastrous loss of revenue when CPM died: DRI's
revenues fell from a $40 million a year to a $1 million a year.
I wouldn't be surprised if Tramiel decided to take on Apple. Atari is in
a much better position than DRI to fight a lawsuit, and Tramiel is on
public record as saying that it is sometimes cheaper to fight a lawsuit
than to honor a contract. He is quit a feisty character.
|
407.15 | Patent on IF/THEN/ELSE...what! | PANIC::SHORT | Peter Short, Office Systems Unit, London | Thu Mar 19 1987 10:28 | 11 |
| an aside to the real issue
re .13
> before Apple ever did one. On the other hand, it may be a useless
> patent like the one Digital has on the IF/THEN/ELSE statement.
Whats this about a Digital patent on IF/THEN/ELSE, if its in another
note/conference please let me know.
interested_in_history_of_DEC
|
407.16 | Frontiers of Computer Science | ERIS::CALLAS | So many ratholes, so little time | Thu Mar 19 1987 13:52 | 15 |
| re .15:
Last fall, Roger Heinen received a patent on some work he did. He
invented a technique whereby the computer looks at some condition (like
a variable being equal to some value or something like that) and if the
condition is true, one path of code is executed, while if the condition
is false, another path is executed. Roger was giggling about it
himself.
By the way, this revolutionary concept was invented in the VAXELN
debugger.
There is a similar patent that IBM has for XOR.
Jon
|