7166793 This one is a stacked single coil size pickup.
As an aside, I met Beller once back in '95. He seemed like an cool guy... said if I wanted anything custom wound to give them a call... even one off pickups.
Here's my patent list:
Fender:
6291759
4885970
3177283
2817261
4220069
Gibson:
6372976
4026178
6392137
2896491 (Lover)
2087106 (charlie christian pickup)
It would be possible to describe everything scientifically, but it would make no sense; it would be without meaning, as if you described a Beethoven symphony as a variation of wave pressure. — Albert Einstein
An idea cannot be patented, only your method of doing it can.
A large number of patents are bogus.
The patent office is mostly a record-keeping office. They generally let industry fight it out to see if a patent is valid, otherwise it sits there uncontested.
The patent office generally does not decide if a patent is valid unless it is extremely obvious that it was already invented or is not novel.
Take the wheel for example.
If the patent office already recorded a patent for someone for inventing the wheel, they would not record a patent for you for this. It would be extremely obvious that the wheel was already invented. And, it they hadn't recorded a patent for someone else yet, they still would not do it for you. It would be extremely obvious that inventing the wheel is not novel.
A patent search to see if the "invention" already exists or is similar to one that already exists is required before a patent can be issued. But the patent office does not do the search. They require that the person applying for the patent to do the search.
Bottom line: If you are not "inventing" the wheel, you fill the paperwork out correctly, and you pay the fee, you get your "patent."
Most of the protection for electronic circuits comes from copyrights, not patents. The foil patern on a printed-circuit board is unique and can be copyrighted as art. Most companies copyright their artwork on their PC boards because it is easy to prosecute someone who copies it. When someone duplicates their PC boards, it is blatently obvious.
Most of the protection for electronic circuits comes from copyrights, not patents. The foil patern on a printed-circuit board is unique and can be copyrighted as art. Most companies copyright their artwork on their PC boards because it is easy to prosecute someone who copies it. When someone duplicates their PC boards, it is blatently obvious
But with one note: the 17 years was from date of grant, while the 20 years is from date of filing, which was about 3 years earlier back when the law was changed.
But with one note: the 17 years was from date of grant, while the 20 years is from date of filing, which was about 3 years earlier back when the law was changed.
That's an important distinction.
If a litigious company wants to impede someone's developing market share by filing a questionable patent on prior art, there's the tool to do it.
If a litigious company wants to impede someone's developing market share by filing a questionable patent on prior art, there's the tool to do it.
That was not the reason, though. The issue was "submarine patents", where the applicant would cause delay after delay, making change after change, all in secret (applications were secret then), only emerging after twenty years, after a goodly sized industry had grown up, and then the now inventor would go around and demand outlandish sums of money.
Congress did two things to put a stop to this abuse of process. First, changed the term to 20 years after original filing. Second, they required applications to become public after 18 months.
Dimarzio v. Kinman was a good example.
Hmm. I bet they would have found the weapons ... whatever is close at hand.
But as long as you can show you improved on a previous patent, you can get a new patent.
It would be possible to describe everything scientifically, but it would make no sense; it would be without meaning, as if you described a Beethoven symphony as a variation of wave pressure. — Albert Einstein
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