Adobe Beats Macromedia In Tabs Patent Case 13
An Anonymous Coward points to this Adobe press release, writing "Adobe has won in its rather-silly patent lawsuit vs Macromedia, which covers the "tabbed palettes" UI used in so many applications these days. Hard to believe this one stood up in court, but hey..." Slightly less happy is Macromedia's release.
So.... (Score:1)
Good riddance (Score:2, Informative)
A link to... (Score:3, Informative)
Method of displaying multiple sets of information in the same area of a computer screen
Abstract:
Filed June 23, 1994. I guess that does put it before I remember Altsys doing similar it in Freehand (before Frehand was sold to Macromedia).
software & user interface patent (Score:4, Insightful)
On the other hand, a great deal of algorithm work and research comes from universities, and I would hope that companies are not permitted to take the work of others and then go and patent it as their own. That wouldn't be fair.
The other thing is that software patents don't really need to be as long as physical object patents, since it is much easier to recoup costs which ought to be lower, and since manufacture and distribution can take place extremely rapidly where the product is information or software.
Other than that, I think that software patents could be beneficial to society as they provide inventors incentive to release their methodology to the public domain in exchange for temporary legal protection from competitors disassembling the product and using ideas which cost research money to find.
Lots of prior art on this one.... (Score:4, Interesting)
Hmmm....I wonder if I still have the source code stashed somewhere....
-a
Re:Lots of prior art on this one.... (Score:1)
As I recall, the particularly outstanding element was that the tabbed dialogs could be separated, rejoined, hidden, etc. It's more than just the idea of having tabbed dialogs.
But if you have prior art of the former, have at it.
Re:Lots of prior art on this one.... (Score:1)
-a
What about Mozilla? (Score:1, Interesting)
Oh, hey, and what about Lotus Notes? Or Excel?
I'm not trolling, being ironic or funny here -- how broad can you stretch the definition of a tabbed palette?
Borland and Micro$ost uses them! (Score:1)
Now Macromedia's won their countersuit (Score:1)
San Francisco--May 10, 2002--Macromedia, Inc. (Nasdaq: MACR) today announced that a jury ruled in its favor in a counterclaims suit against Adobe Systems. The verdict included a damage award of $4.9 million. Macromedia intends to ask the court to issue an injunction to stop Adobe's infringement, and also intends to appeal the verdict in the initial Adobe case.
"The score is now Adobe one, Macromedia one, customers zero," said Rob Burgess, chairman and CEO, Macromedia. "Macromedia is absolutely committed to defending the right to innovate."
Adobe was found to infringe all three Macromedia patents. U.S. Patent No. 5,467,443 relates to changing blended elements and automatic re-blending of elements and is infringed by its Adobe Illustrator product. U.S. Patents Nos. 5,151,998 and 5,204,969 relate to visually displaying and editing sound waveforms and are infringed by its Adobe Premiere product. The jury also found U.S. Patent No. 5,151,998 to be invalid.
In October 2001, Macromedia brought a patent infringement suit against Adobe in the Northern District of California relating to additional patents that Macromedia believes that Adobe infringes. This case is scheduled for June 2003.