Microsoft Patents Keyboard Browser Navigation 32
Scooby Snacks writes "It looks like Microsoft and the United States Patent and Trademark Office have done it again. It would appear that Microsoft, in their extensive R&D labs, have developed a way to control a web browser through the use of a keyboard. What's next, a method for displaying a plurality of running programs, each in its own defined rectangular viewing area?"
This is a duplicate article :-( (Score:5, Informative)
Redundant news (Score:3, Informative)
The story should be called: USPTO stuffs up again.
NTSH, MA
Re:Redundant news (Score:1)
Slashdot's trying so hard to be an anti-MS watchdog. Wolf! Wolf!
Re:Redundant news (Score:3, Insightful)
If only someone REALLY rich would join our side.
An outdated dupe... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:An outdated dupe... (Score:2)
Mircosoft obfuscating facts to obtain patents (and obviously bribing the USPTO) is always news. The web was originally TEXT ONLY. How many roll & scroll applications used a mouse at all in 1997? For the USPTO to say that using a keyboard is an INVENTION is an outrage! Remember when LYNX was the only way to view the 'net?
C'mon yourself. This is blasphemous.
Re:An outdated dupe... (Score:4, Interesting)
I share your righteous indignation at the stupid patent, but your facts are a bit off...
Read Tim Berners-Lee's FAQ [w3.org] about the web. The first web browser was designed on a NeXT system, and was graphical. Yes, a line-mode browser was written shortly thereafter, but a windowed point-and-click version came first. Graphics weren't inline, but they were definitely part of the initial idea. But the app itself was indeed GUI based.
And how many applications used a mouse in 1997!? Dude, all the apps I've been using have been with a mouse since Jan 24, 1984, where've you been?
But seriously, the patent is patently ridiculous, excuse the pun. The "invention" is a method for using the tab key to select a link on a web page. I feel as though millions of geeks all cried out "DUH!" and were silenced...
- Peter
In other news... (Score:1, Funny)
Re:In other news... (Score:1)
Have the /. editorial staff been outsourced? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Have the /. editorial staff been outsourced? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Have the /. editorial staff been outsourced? (Score:3, Interesting)
("This exact comment has already been posted. Try to be more original..." - Wow, that's a new one.)
Re:Have the /. editorial staff been outsourced? (Score:2)
Re:Have the /. editorial staff been outsourced? (Score:2)
really... (Score:2, Funny)
ctrl+alt+del (Score:2)
Is there a group of Dupe Trolls? (Score:1)
*TIN FOIL HAT*
Its a consipracy I tell ya!
Re:Is there a group of Dupe Trolls? (Score:4, Informative)
The patent was applied for March 6, 1997, but it wasn't approved/published until August 30, 2004. Sorry, no coincidences involved, it's just a week old story which is about on par for Slashdot.
Whoops, I pressed tab to preview my comment. Dang I hate to pay those M$ royalties!
MS Royalties, Shakespeare style... (Score:1)
No kidding! They don't even anesthetize you for the operation!
What are they doing with all that back skin, anyway?
~UP
Re:Is there a group of Dupe Trolls? (Score:1)
You'd think that if they were actually looking for prior art they would have found it in that time. I think we've just learned that the mysterious black box through which patents are passed doesn't have any wild mechanisms other than a long queue.
--Matthew
Please (Score:2)
Don't give them ideas!
curved focus shapes (Score:1)
Rectangular? (Score:3, Funny)
Prior Art! (Score:3, Interesting)
SD
At what point .... (Score:3, Insightful)
The use of keys to control a GUI is far from novel, and just because it's the damned web I fail to see anything new or original about this.
Waay back when Microsoft applications didn't run in windows or anything, and there was no network to connect to, that whole "alt+f" to bring up the file menu was well established in things like DOS' edit program and has been applied to everything since.
Aeons before that, vt100 terminals and the like could use the tab key to move among fields for data input. Hell, the Motif style guidelines would have included stuff which describes how to do keyboard shortcuts, and it predated Microsoft's patent application by a whole lot of years.
I've said this before, but why the hell is a method of interacting with a piece of software via the keyboard a novel or patentable exercise, or does it count as innovation???
If you've had keyboard navigation in applications for over a decade (almost two!), just because you add keyboard navigation to a new application doesn't mean shit.
Meh.
Re:At what point .... (Score:2)
just like acacia's 'web streaming' patent that applies to any file downloaded off the internet.
give me freakin break.