Comments on: Apple patent applications hint at Wi-Fi iPods, new mice
Apple has filed for several patents that could hint at future iPods that talk to each other and a mouse that moves 3D objects.
Apple has filed for several patents that could hint at future iPods that talk to each other and a mouse that moves 3D objects.
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http://www.electronista.com/articles/07/07/12/apple.zune.like.patent/
" Apple may be ready to not only bring wireless file sharing to the iPhone and iPod but could affect Microsoft's Zune as well, according to the details of a newly publicized patent. The filing would allow fully mobile devices such as cellphones and MP3 players to automatically discover each other on a local network, similar to the way the Zune can recognize nearby devices on its Wi-Fi connection; also as with the Microsoft jukebox, owners would be able to "push" media and other files to other devices. But the patent's implementation would also let a device make such requests, Apple says, allowing one handheld to pick files for download in a way the Zune currently forbids. A wireless sync method could automate these requests simply by coming near the right device. "
Beyond Zune Wi-FI capabilities.
was shown off in Nov.
Videos do not squirt because the file size does not make them ideally suited. It's not as if they couldn't be.
As for documents..the zune is a media player, not a PDA. If you want to go into that realm you have to stop looking at the Zune and start looking at Windows mobile devices. These have been able to transfer data of any type between each other for years now. It's nothing new. It also occurs at speeds far beyond what the iPhone is currently capable of.
Really, none of this is any sort of stunning innovation. When the Zune did it it was already long overdue. It's good to see the competition helping the consumer though.
How does Apple plan on getting around the legal hurdles, according to your sources? (Are your sources Jobs-level, or lower?)
- Good patent?
- by billmosby July 12, 2007 4:24 PM PDT
- I realize it hasn't issued yet, and furthermore I haven't read the
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
(15 Comments)application, but does anybody else think that the idea of one
mobile device talking to another is novel or unobvious? Maybe if I
saw the details I might have a different take on it, but on the face
of it the idea seems unpatentable.