R
Rich Grise
Guest
On Mon, 30 May 2005 11:57:23 +0100, Ian wrote:
make it easier to dump, was done before Dyson was a gleam in his old
man's eye.
Is this the Dyson who invented the vacuum cleaner that "accelerates
the dirt to a hundred thousand times the force of gravity"? Some idle
rich boy, no doubt. Imagine, getting a patent on the wheel!
Maybe I should patent fire, and get a royalty every time somebody
turns on the gas grill! Yeah! That's it! ;-P
Jim Thompson's grill will be safe, though, because charcoal/mesquite burns
without an open flame. ;-)
Cheers!
Rich
No, the one I'm talking about, the thing with the swivel handles to"keith" <krw@att.bizzzz> wrote in message
newsan.2005.05.29.03.54.26.45778@att.bizzzz...
On Sun, 29 May 2005 02:09:30 +0000, Ben Bradley wrote:
On Sat, 28 May 2005 14:16:49 GMT, Rich Grise <richgrise@example.net
On Sat, 28 May 2005 12:49:59 +1200, Terry Given wrote:
Tim Shoppa wrote:
....
hilarious stuff on bullshit patents. Most things have been thought
of before.
Some years ago, there was a newspaper or newsmagazine article on some
guy who accidentally patented the wheelbarrow. He had applied for one
on some kind of add-on swivel handles, to make it easier to dump, but
the patent office issued a patent for the whole thing.
How can that happen? The application spells out each thing that is
being claimed, how can the patent office issue something different?
Indeed. The "teachings" are a different beast than the "claims". The
teachings _may_ have described the wheelbarrow, but that doesn't mean
that a patent was issued for a "wheelbarrow". I want a cite here (a
patent number will do). This makes no sense at all.
I *think* this was Dyson (of vacuum cleaner fame), and what he patented
was the ball-barrow, where the wheel was replaced with a sphere with an
axle through it.
make it easier to dump, was done before Dyson was a gleam in his old
man's eye.
Is this the Dyson who invented the vacuum cleaner that "accelerates
the dirt to a hundred thousand times the force of gravity"? Some idle
rich boy, no doubt. Imagine, getting a patent on the wheel!
Maybe I should patent fire, and get a royalty every time somebody
turns on the gas grill! Yeah! That's it! ;-P
Jim Thompson's grill will be safe, though, because charcoal/mesquite burns
without an open flame. ;-)
Cheers!
Rich