Monthly Archives: September 2012


In his weekly column for +The Guardian former Apple executive Jean-Louis Gassée… 2

In his weekly column for +The Guardian former Apple executive Jean-Louis Gassée makes the case that Apple has never really invented anything, and I'm mostly inclined to agree. Apart from the Apple 1 which was actually the brainchild of the other founding Steve, pretty much every other successful (an not so successful) product to emerge from Cupertino was a refinement of something that had gone before. 

Apple certainly does deserve a great deal of credit for taking technology and making it more usable and appealing to consumers than what had gone before. From the original Macintosh to the iPod to the iPhone and the iPad (along with the Newton, Cube and others) they had all been done.

What Apple designers and engineers did was take parts that worked better than the originals and edit out the parts that didn't. The end result is often a great product that many consumers justifiably love and are willing to pay a premium for. However, that doesn't necessarily make them something that should be patented. 

Apple has followed this process very consistently since the late 1990s but they are by no means alone. 

There are other businesses that nearly gone down this patent warfare path. In my former life as an automotive engineer I experienced this first hand. I worked for Kelsey-Hayes on anti-lock brake systems. The leader in the field was German company Robert Bosch GmbH. Unlike Apple, Bosch has actually truly invented a lot stuff since its founding in 1886. It has rightfully earned a lot of patents for stuff no one had done before. 

However, like Apple Bosch has also earned a lot of dubious patents in the past couple of decades. In the early 1990s as Kelsey-Hayes was making inroads into Bosch's market, there were veiled threats of patent suits. Like the engineers at Google, Samsung and HTC today, we spent a lot of time over several years going back and researching these patents and modifying our code just enough to work around the claims. 

We also ended up filing hundreds, if not thousands of patents of our own for defensive purposes, most of which were of dubious quality such as this one:
http://www.google.com/patents/US5615934 Everyone had known for decades what happened when tires aquaplaned. I just parameterized the characteristic wheel speeds and wrote some equations. 

In the end, the lawyers made a lot of money off Kelsey-Hayes, Bosch, Continental and other auto suppliers for filing all of these patents, Bosch continued on their way, creating traction control, stability control, electrohydraulic brakes and more. At Kelsey-Hayes we developed a bunch of stuff of our own. No one ever sued but we did squander a lot of engineering hours examining patents, writing patents and developing workarounds.

Today Bosch, Continental and TRW (which absorbed Kelsey-Hayes in 1999) all have substantial market shares in the slip control market and are all making money while developing new products. It's time for tech companies led by Apple to do the same and let the lawyers move on. 

Apple haven’t invented anything
The iPad is simply Apple’s variation, its interpretation of a well-known tablet recipe

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Yeah that whole free-market health care thing is just working wonders in Maine 8

 Let's try it throughout the United States. 

Reshared post from +Paula Jones

"The group found that more than half of individual policyholders saw their rates go up, not down. It was even worse for small businesses: 90 percent of them got rate increases instead of decreases. And, as consumer advocates had feared, hardest hit were indeed older workers and people living in rural areas, most of whom saw good coverage options previously available to them disappear."

Maine’s Free-Market Health Care Dream Turning Into Nightmare for Many
What happened in Maine is a sobering reality check on the oft-repeated myth that getting rid of ObamaCare and other consumer protections is the answer to our health care problems.

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Twitter Weekly Updates for 2012-09-10

  • Phrases that should be banished for all time – "can we get X bites of the apple?" #
  • I've heard the bites of the apple phrase at least half a dozen times on this call in the last 15 minutes #
  • Just posted a photo http://t.co/8YbKjyep #
  • "It's time for Democrats to grow a backbone and stand for what we believe!" Gov Duval Patrick #DNC2012 #
  • I sense a pattern here. Check the back corners http://t.co/TUcVazjo #

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This is just so obscene and wrong 2

When we have schools across the country struggling to make ends meet, spending $60 million on a high school football stadium is insane. 

Reshared post from +Dan Gillmor

America's economic competitors must be delighted when they hear of our $60 million high-school football stadium. 

Everything’s Bigger In Texas, Especially This $60 Million High School Football Stadium | NewsFeed | TIME.com
High school football in Texas is no joke, especially in the Dallas suburb of Allen, which just spent $60 million on a lavish new stadium for its high school football team.

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A lot today's high technology evolved out of the space program of the 1960s but…

A lot today's high technology evolved out of the space program of the 1960s but in many respects it has accelerated far beyond what gets used in space now. It turns out that when building the Curiosity rover that recently landed on Mars, the engineers opted for carefully tied knots instead of the zip ties favored by most of here on Earth. 

It turns out the the engineers developing spacecraft tend to take fairly conservative approaches to design and it actually makes a lot of sense. If you are developing something that is going to be shot tens of millions of miles into space where there is no opportunity to repair problems, you do whatever you can to avoid potential problems in the first place. 

Knots on Mars! (and a few thoughts on NASA’s knots)
Knots on Mars! (and a few thoughts on NASA’s knots)

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The next time you hear someone talk about growing government under Obama, consider… 6

The next time you hear someone talk about growing government under Obama, consider these graphs of private and public sector employment under Bush and Obama. Aside from a temporary spike when census takers were hired in 2010, government employment under Obama has been on a steady downward path, contrary to what happened between 2001 and 2004

Employment in Two Administrations
Bush the socialist?

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I would urge anyone that lives in Maryland's 10th district to vote out state… 2

I would urge anyone that lives in Maryland's 10th district to vote out state delegate Emmett C Burns Jr at the next available opportunity. While I fundamentally disagree with Mr Burns strident opposition to marriage equality I totally defend his right to be an ignorant bigot. 

I oppose Mr Burns or anyone else regardless of their political affiliation trying to restrict free speech rights of any person in this country. I was against it when conservatives tried prevent Americans from speaking out against George W Bush last decade and I oppose it when a homophobic politician and baptist minister that happens to be a Democrat tries to get the owner of a football team to silence one of his players. #freespeech  

Politician Demands Ravens To Silence Player Over Gay Marriage Support
If all that Emmert C. Burns Jr. wanted was more attention then he has succeeded. If the Baltimore politician was trying to forward his political beliefs, silence All-Pro NFL linebacker Brendon Ayanbad…

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In addition to today's Star Trek themed Google doodle, Trek fans should check… 2

In addition to today's Star Trek themed Google doodle, Trek fans should check out the new Mission Log podcast. Each week, they examine a different episode of the show going through them in the order they aired. Once they finish the original series they will be going through each of the spin-off series as well

Mission Log: A Roddenberry Star Trek Podcast
Episode 005 The Naked Time: Breaking a sweat leads to multiple breakdowns on the Enterprise. Singing! Swordplay! Kirk is torn between two lovers! This week, we’re putting

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How much worse could a single payer system possibly be? 2

How much worse could a single payer system possibly be?

Reshared post from +Jim Fawcette

$750 Billion Wasted Annually

New report rips inefficient healthcare system. If the financial system worked like the healthcare system an ATM transaction would take days. 

WonkBlog: "America spent $2.6 trillion on health care last year; about one in every six dollars went into the health-care system. A third of that spending — a full $750 billion — did nothing to make anyone healthier."

Report: 
http://iom.edu/Reports/2012/Best-Care-at-Lower-Cost-The-Path-to-Continuously-Learning-Health-Care-in-America.aspx

WonkBlog summary:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/ezra-klein/wp/2012/09/07/we-spend-750-billion-on-unnecessary-health-care-two-charts-explain-why/ 

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