“I think this is great. Issues that have recently risen to the surface in the technology marketplace have been quite boring lately. I needed a good laugh.
The issue really is this: Has Franz Kafka come back to Life? The flow diagrams and the method processes listed within the patent application seem to be focused. However, the focus does not include the history of the web and the work of the pioneers in the Rich Internent Application Space. When all is said and done, this scenario is like a person applying for a patent for walking, because his or her walk is "walking" and analogous to the "Platonic Form" of walking.
Considering the mass of prior art, they're not likely to end the "web as we know it" anytime soon.
#8
QuoteUnquote commented on 1 Mar 2006
[from the Balthaser Online Inc press release]
'This new addition to our patent portfolio is a pioneering patent and provides significant licensing opportunities for both Balthaser and our licensees,' stated Neil Balthaser, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman.
'The patent covers all rich media technology implementations including Flash, Flex, Java, Ajax and XAML and all device footprints which access Rich-Media Internet Applications including desktops, mobile devices, set-top boxes and video game consoles. Balthaser will be able to provide licenses for almost any Rich-Media Internet Application across a broad range of devices and networks.'
It would appear that some of the earliest flash and generator work myself and some of my colleges were involved in back in the earliest days of flash has broken one of the most ludicrous patent awards I have heard of.
Neil Balthaser has been awarded a Patent relating to the online production of RIAs using RIAs over a remote connection.
I find this incredible given the number of flash applications that were around at that time that must have existed to be listed as prior art that would have shown quite obviously that there was not a single original idea, process or product related to the Balthather FX/ProFX site.
In the UK there is the MoonFruit platform for a start that was live before the Pro FX site for a start (here's the link: http://www.moonfruit.com/), not least the fact that Macromedia's own Generator product offered exactly the engine of such automated production online.
So here for your delectation is 'Casper' an application born in 1998/1999 some time originally utilising flash 3/4 and generator and then more recently updated through flash 5 and Flash MX. (Here's the URL: http://casper.bittube.com/)
In the future I fully intend to bring the code base kicking and screaming into Flash AS2/3 and re-introduce the capabilities to 'export' or 'produce' rich media presentations from it.
For those of you who were also around producing this form of 'RIA' back in the day, I highly recommend you dig out and dust off your old FLAs and report those productions over at OSFlash.org as prior art.
Where this patent leaves future development of similar concepts in relation to Flex, server-based MTasc/swfMill AJAX or any other form and or mixture of technology(ies) you can think of remains to be seen.
This either looks like another U.S. Patent & Trade Office fiasco and/or a company setting itself up to be acquired and put out of its misery.
In any event, it - and the patent battle between NTP and RIM - illustrates the USPTO should undergo an extensive review to assess whether the granting of patents is being done in a way that protects the rights of investors while still leaving enough flexibility to encourage innovation.
#5
ClarificationPlease commented on 1 Mar 2006
Is it true that the patent covers all rich media technology implementations including Flash, Flex, Java, Ajax and XAML?
#4
pyrosx commented on 28 Feb 2006
WTF! Hell of a job the US Patent Office is doing. Obviously they are somewhere near the lower end of the american literacy curve. I feel so embarrassed for the patent system right now.
I should patent 'A system of posting free speech online.' and collect royalties from all online publications.
#3
pyrosx commented on 28 Feb 2006
WTF! Hell of a job the US Patent Office is doing. Obviously they are somewhere near the lower end of the american literacy curve. I feel so embarrassed for the patent system right now.
I should patent 'A system of posting free speech online.' and collect royalties from all online publications.
#2
queZZtion commented on 28 Feb 2006
Is this the same Neil Balthaser that used to be a VP of strategy for Macromedia?
#1
DL Byron commented on 28 Feb 2006
Balthaser can yell bingo with the ruling and now will try to win the megalotto by hoping some company would rather license the patent then fight them.
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