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Patents United States

America's Last Top Models (newyorker.com) 17

For decades, U.S. inventors sent in models with their patent applications -- gizmos that reveal a secret history of unmet needs and relentless innovation. The New Yorker: The ruins of American invention have been recently resurrected in a former textile mill in Wilmington, Delaware. The Henry Clay Mill, now better known as Hagley Museum and Library Visitor Center, is perched on the banks of Brandywine Creek, at the southern edge of a sprawling estate once owned by the du Pont family; just upstream lies the oldest of the dynasty's several stately homes in the region, as well as the remains of the gunpowder works upon which its fortune was built. One morning, Chris Cascio, a curator, welcomed me into the mill, where the space once occupied by cotton-picking and carding machines now houses a curious exhibit: the scavenged remainders of a much larger, long-lost museum.

From 1790 to 1880, Cascio explained, the U.S. Patent Office first encouraged and then required an inventor to submit a model along with each application. These models -- thousands of miniature devices, often exquisitely detailed -- were then exhibited in Washington, D.C., in the office's model gallery. Sometimes called the "Temple of Invention," the gallery was a bustling landmark: it regularly attracted up to ten thousand visitors a month and was ranked as "the greatest permanent attraction in the city," according to one newspaper. But by the late nineteenth century it had effectively shut its doors. Hagley's latest exhibit, "Nation of Inventors," is the largest permanent public display of patent models since that time.

[...] The U.S. system was also unique in that no other country required a model to accompany a patent application. The reasons why soon became clear. As early as the eighteen-thirties, the collection had outgrown the Patent Office's cramped headquarters at the former Blodgett's Hotel. In 1836, a fire destroyed at least seven thousand models, but, rather than abandon the requirement, the Patent Office doubled down, securing congressional funding to reconstruct the models and laying the foundations for a truly monumental building, with a facade modelled after the Parthenon. The structure, which now houses the Smithsonian's American Art Museum and the National Portrait Gallery, occupies an entire city block. In the engineer Pierre L'Enfant's master plan for the capital, it was intended to serve as a kind of nondenominational "church of the republic," between the White House on one side and the Capitol on the other.

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America's Last Top Models

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  • The USPTO will grant you a patent on your perpetual motion invention if you submit a working model. This is why perpetual motion crackpots file patents for devices that output exactly as much energy as is input, with no loss. That doesn't require a working model, unlike "over unity" devices.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    • by KingFatty ( 770719 ) on Wednesday March 13, 2024 @04:04PM (#64313255)
      No, the USPTO will *NOT* grant a patent for a perpetual motion machine. It will be flat out rejected for lack of credibility due to involving perpetual motion (which is impossible): "IV. UTILITY A claimed invention must be useful or have a utility that is specific, substantial and credible. A rejection on the ground of lack of utility is appropriate when (1) it is not apparent why the invention is âoeusefulâ because applicant has failed to identify any specific and substantial utility and there is no well established utility, or (2) an assertion of specific and substantial utility for the invention is not credible. Such a rejection can include the more specific grounds of inoperativeness, such as inventions involving perpetual motion. "
      • by dlleigh ( 313922 )

        The USPTO could reject the patent on those grounds but doesn't have to. Just because someone receives a patent doesn't mean that the invention necessarily works. But the patent office will require a working model if the application claims that the device puts out more energy than it takes in. Don't claim that and you may get your patent.

        There is even a patent category for such things:

        F03B17/04 - Alleged perpetua mobilia
        Perpetua mobilia of alleged kind, i.e. devices where the hydrostatic thrust effect is use

      • No, the USPTO will *NOT* grant a patent for a perpetual motion machine. It will be flat out rejected for lack of credibility due to involving perpetual motion (which is impossible)...

        Re-read the post you replied to: "The USPTO will grant you a patent on your perpetual motion invention if you submit a working model."
        If you can submit a working model, then I think you've got credibility (and have apparently discovered an error in known physics).

        Also, by definition, a rejection for lacking utility would be inappropriate if the perpetual motion machine does work.

        • The quote is incorrect because, even with a working model, the uspto will still reject. If you satisfy one requirement, you don't automatically become excused from satisfying all of the others.
          • by dlleigh ( 313922 )

            You don't know what you're talking about. The USPTO has granted many patents for "suspected" (ahem) perpetual motion machines. I posted a link to some examples, but here's an interesting explanation of one case by a patent attorney:

            https://unmakeme.com/2022/05/0... [unmakeme.com]

            The secret to getting your patent granted (besides arguing a lot with the patent examiner) is to avoid claiming "over unity", even if your device would clearly provide that if it did as you described.

            And, as the other poster mentioned, an actual w

            • Use logic. The original quote makes a faulty assertion, that you'll get a patent for a perpetual motion invention, if you have a model. That's just not true, because they'll reject you for various other reasons, despite your having a model. USPTO will grant a patent for ideas that satisfy all the various requirements for a patent (there are many). The USPTO will reject a perpetual motion machine for various reasons, including 1) lack of a model, 2) lack of utility *because* it is a perpetual motion machin
  • Hagley Museum (Score:4, Informative)

    by Retired Chemist ( 5039029 ) on Wednesday March 13, 2024 @03:17PM (#64313151)
    If you are ever nearby, Hagley Museum is well worth a visit. It has great exhibits on the history of water powered industry in the early days of the United States.
  • by Old-Claimjumper ( 463905 ) on Wednesday March 13, 2024 @03:38PM (#64313195)
    So do we get to see the collection of all the models related to all the software patents over the years?
    • FTA: "Samuel Sparks Fisher, who became the Commissioner of Patents in 1869, pointed out that “it must soon become a serious question to determine what disposition is to be made of the models.” The next year, Congress passed new legislation, dropping the requirement for models."
  • by omnichad ( 1198475 ) on Wednesday March 13, 2024 @03:46PM (#64313219) Homepage

    at the southern edge of a sprawling estate once owned by the du Pont family; just upstream lies the oldest of the dynasty's several stately homes in the region

    The Du Pont family was not going to live downstream of their own facilities even then.

  • There are some of these models at the National Portrait Gallery in DC. https://npg.si.edu/whats-on/cu... [si.edu] Makes sense. Looks like the old patent office is part of that complex. I especially like the little model of a machine to make twisted wire picket fencing.
  • ... what anyone else thinks. Tyra is still hot.

  • Is this really an article about top models? Why is there no mention of Claudia Schiffer, Cindy Crawford and the like?

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