The iPhone patent: Steven P. Jobs, inventor
The US Patent and Trademark Office has revealed a mammoth document that can only be described as The iPhone Patent, a 371-page spectacular that covers Apple's handheld multi-touch UI paradigm in excruciating detail. Many of the mocked-up screen shots depicted in the paperwork are dead ringers for screens that we're well acquainted with in the production phone, while others represent ideas that either haven't finished cooking or eventually found their way into the Cupertino circular file (follow the break for a picture of a home screen with dedicated "Blog" and dictionary apps, for instance). The application also mentions "modules" for video conferencing, GPS, and other currently non-existent (though widely expected) functionality. And in case there's any doubt over who was responsible for this compendium of legalese, industrial design, and technical diagrams, one only need look at the header of page 1: "Jobs et al." Yep, Steve himself wasn't the least bit shy about taking credit atop an entire column of company A-listers for inventing the iPhone's trademark user interface, which we're guessing came about from a mix of equal parts truth, ego, and ass-kissing from the legal department down the hall. Seriously though, if you're Scott Forstall down there at number two on the Inventors list, what are you going to do -- go boardroom showdown all John Sculley-style?
[Via Cellpassion]

[Via Cellpassion]






















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Tesseract @ May 30th 2008 8:16AM
Well, now we know where they are hiding all those fancy features in the iphone (see accelerometer).
roach @ May 30th 2008 8:32AM
They totally infringed on my patent!!!
Time to call my lawyer in Texas....
Verizon customer @ May 30th 2008 2:06PM
...and Al Gore invented the internet.
dare instructor @ May 31st 2008 11:57AM
I'm honestly surprised it's not in this order:
Steven P. Jobs
God
Minions
Henchmen
Steve @ Jun 2nd 2008 1:20PM
It is just copying the patent by Prof. Willie W. Lu, chair of USCWC at: uscwc.org.
Willie proposed the next generation phone called iHand in 2005, and filed patent at that time.