Apple scored a major win when the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office awarded the iPhone maker with 18 patents.
Related to various ways of interacting with mobile devices, the
patents, awarded Oct. 12, were filed for on dates ranging from 2003
through 2008.
The content of the patents ranges from describing ornamental designs
on the keyboard and dock, to a method for syncing three or more
devices. One patent, filed in January 2008, describes the ability to
block the receipt of text messages that contain objectionable content
or to receive messages based on set criteria. For example, states the
patent abstract, “These embodiments might … require that a certain
number of Spanish words per day be included in e-mails for a child
learning Spanish.”
More pertinent, however, several of the patents relate to multitouch
technology—the way of navigating with finger swipes, swirls and pinches
that’s inherent to the iPhone experience. Apple debuted its first
iPhone in June 2007, offering what was for most consumers a first
interaction with multitouch technology.
One patent, filed in December 2006, is for a “portable electronic
device with multitouch input” that “performs one or more operations …
based on the one or more multitouch contacts and/or motions.”
Another, filed in February 2007, identifies and classifies the
various ways that “intuitive hand configurations and motions [enable
the] unprecedented integration of typing, resting, pointing, scrolling,
3D manipulation, and handwriting into a versatile, ergonomic computer
input device.”
Still another, describing multitouch sensing methods, details that
they can be included in interfaces for devices such as a “desktop,
tablet, notebook and handheld computers, personal digital assistants,
media players, and mobile telephones.”
For now it’s unclear how the awarding of the patents will affect
several patent-related lawsuits that Apple is currently engaged in with
direct rivals Nokia, Motorola and HTC, as well as with Kodak.