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Comment Re:ok so... (Score 1) 323

If the speakers/microphone were a set of stylized vertical grills (which might look quite nice actually), there would be no lawsuit. Square screen (and why couldn't someone make a nice UI for a square screen?) and there is no lawsuit. Screen offset from the center (perhaps a row of function buttons underneath?) and there is no lawsuit. A significant colour difference anywhere on the device and there would be no lawsuit. Hell, make the buttons rounded squares and you have probably killed any possible claims.

So why is there a lawsuit when it is a completely different size and aspect ratio? Along with having the word SAMSUNG on the front of it?

Comment Re:obvious choices (Score 1) 323

Yes, that is one of the goals of patents--to encourage innovation and risk-taking by giving the company that took the risk a commensurate reward by offering a limited term monopoly.

They get enough reward by being first to market if it sells. Everything else is just anti-competitive

And how is it so terribly detrimental to make other companies come up with their own original design ideas?

Flat, few to no buttons, clear screen, bezels, rectangular. That is the form factor that Tablets serve, and is what consumers want. So you have two choices, give consumers what they want or try something new that may or may not sell. Obviously the safer choice for a company is to pick one or two areas where you can distinguish yourself (color, size, aspect ratio) but keep the rest (flat, bezels, rectangular), thus detrimental not to follow what is currently selling, unless you get lucky.

Have you actually thought about this? Apple introduces a new iPhone and iPad every year. Do you think that next year's model will sell well if it doesn't appreciably improve on last year's one? What do you imagine would happen to Apple's profits and stock price if everybody decided to stick with last year's model?

Apple introduces a new iPhone and iPad every year because other companies are releasing other phones and tablets to compete with them. If there were no other competitors in the smartphone or tablet spaces, I can guarantee the actual improvement year to year for their devices would be substantially smaller. You have proved GP's point. Competition has given Apple pressure to improve.

Apple is not the only company with patents. So if the courts find that Apple has infringed an Android patent, Apple will have to pay a license fee, or trade some of its own patents to get access to that feature, or come up with its own features that are even better. How is that such a bad thing?

Notice how none of the Android makers are suing Apple without having been sued first. Why should you have to pay a license fee to say, "hey, people really like that feature! Let's figure out how we can do it too!" Or even worse, why should you be barred completely from doing it no matter what if they don't want to license the patent? In few cases does this result in "better" features. Better features tend to come around, not because of patents and having to work around them, but by a company saying "how can we improve upon what people currently like?". Generally patents just lead to inefficient designs used as a workaround. Notice I'm not saying that the benefits you tout never happen, just that they are rare enough that the benefit does not outweigh the cost to society.

Think of it this way, if everyone was allowed to just go "hey, people like that, we should figure out how to do it!" then everyone has to turn around and come up with something completely different and new to differentiate themselves. They will need to constantly improve and innovate to make their product better than their competition. Because they know if people like the thing they come up with they get the advantage of being first to market with a really good thing. Which gives them the ability to come up with more improvements before the competition. Patents just slow this entire process down.

Comment Re:So what? (Score 1) 848

There are very draconian rules about what is not allowed based upon a company playing morality police and using anti-competitive behavior. Which I would have no problem with, if you were allowed to install whatever you like from outside of Apple's app store.

You also ignored the first point I made. If your rules prevent any novel and innovative applications at all, then your rules aren't good enough. Either ease up on the restrictions or allow applications to be installed without the app store. Without one of those, Apple will continue to be bashed for its walled garden.

Comment Re:obvious choices (Score 1) 323

So... because Apple took the risk and profited insanely from it at the beginning, they get a monopoly on it? I'll bet Henry Ford would have loved to keep anyone else from making black vehicles, especially if they had spoked wheels.

Design patents are a new concept, and they're detrimental to the industry and society as a whole. There's no pressure to improve if you don't have any competition.

Besides... it's not as if Apple has stolen major design paradigms from Android. Notification bar? OTA updates and backups? Voice commands?

Comment Re:ok so... (Score 1) 323

Yeah... people go with the Samsung because they're confused and think it's an iPad. It's been proven over and over again that knock-offs INCREASE the market share for the originals. Unless Samsung actually made a better device than Apple, and now Apple is just behaving in an anti-competitive manner.

It's not as if Apple hasn't stolen things wholesale, either: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CW0DUg63lqU

They just lie about it better.

Comment Re:That's right, Apple has a monopoly on smart (Score 5, Insightful) 323

Apple just hasn't gotten around to suing the other companies yet. Samsung is the biggest threat, so they're trying to cut the head off the snake. It's not like Apple steals liberally from Android, either... biggest bunch of hypocrites. They do good design, but they take liberal inspiration from other products and then somehow convince their faithful that they're unique. They execute well, but they don't design in a complete vacuum.

Comment Re:So what? (Score 1) 848

1) Policies that target specifically removing malware should not be targeting anything legitimate or innovative. Essentially, if your policies to remove malware result in anything that is not malware being prevented, then your policies are wrong.

2) I'd rather wade through and avoid malware, then prevent the novel and innovative applications from being made.

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