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stand for. If you work for this slimy company, fuck you too for supporting it. I really doubt they have a vaguly written patten as it caused microsoft to settle. Vaguly written pattens don't hold to well, believe it or not. Vaguely worded patents are actually easiest to take to court. If its vaguely or generally worded, its way easier to apply your patent to a wide variety of things, whereas if it’s very specific or particular, you obviously cant apply it to practically every gaming company in the world. Just another argument for the long overdue overhaul of IP patents in this country.

Bar. For those with $50 lying around the house and a need to make it look like the Dark Lord of the Sith is ecnased in the carbonite of your entertainment unit. is not only a big time Japanese actress, appearing in films like The Ring. She also is a product pitchwoman. Watch Frank West Golf a Zombie in Tatsunoko vs. As Seth Killian demonstrates, it can also properly motivate the zombies he summons. He's covered par fours, you know. Please enter your email address. Please enter a valid email address. Please enter your recipient's email address. Please enter a valid email address. Your

today, looks to solve the issue of casual gamers losing interest in a game before they complete it, while still maintaining the interest of hardcore gamers. The solution would turn a game into a full-length cut scene of sorts, allowing players to jump into and out of the action whenever they wanted. But when played this way, gamers would not be able to save their progress, maintaining the challenge of completing a game without skipping or cheating. It would also allow players to bring up in-game hint videos and skip directly to particular scenes in games. While the patent doesn't describe

major players in the MMO market. earlier this year, now has a substantial amount of precedent supporting it. PalTalk purchased two patents from a company called HearMe in 2002 for technology which shares data between networked computers, allowing users to see the same virtual space as they interact with one another in real time. One could construe that to mean PalTalk owns the patent on online multiplayer altogether -- but we're sure Activision's beefy legal team will have a few arguments to the contrary up its sleeve. Sony, Turbine, Jagex, Blizzard, and NCsoft named in patent infringement

gamers to watch a video of a game developers play through of the game, which lays out the storyline and "flow of the scenario" from beginning to the end. At any time a player can press a button to jump into the action of the scene currently being shown. This is done by loading game saves downloaded automatically through a network. Players will start the scene with the appropriate character attribute boosts and items for that part of the game. Saving is not allowed in digest mode. allows gamers to skip directly to a specific scene to play, without having to watch the digest or load a saved

law. Anything to take money out Kotick's wallet makes me happy. Hey there, I got 100 shares of Activision's stock. hahaha, Jagex? seriously? the makers of runescape? but why?!?! blizzard has 20x more cash. how is that trolling? I'm just pointing out that jagex doesn't seem like someone they would sue. they want money and that's clear. and jagex isn't infamously rich. Losing any small ammount could close Rune Scape. I hope they lose some money. even though they hire with an AS and no prior experience. so job wise, they aren't that bad of a start for game developers. I bought two pieces

US out of control. There needs to be tight new regulation regarding them. Everyone wants a piece of someone elses success because it midly looks similar to what you patented yet did nothing with the patent. Not sure why Griffin McElroy chooses to word this as a legal victory and setting some sort of precedent. Considering a private settlement was reached, there is no "law" involved and it sets no precedent whatsoever. If anything it just means that Microsoft considered the cost of going to trial versus the cost of a settlement and chose the option that required the least amount of money.

patent. All they do is buy out the companies that have the patent, and shove it in other companies faces. STFU and innovate some shit Paltalk. No one has heard of you, you have no fucking allies, and its shit companies like you that we, the consumer, end up paying for in higher prices. These companies may be power players and some even monopolies, but at least they fucking move this industry foward. What the hell have you done with your company Paltalk president? Besides sit on a vaguly worded patent and sue other people out of their money which they earned. Fuck you, and everything you

of bread and some turkey a few years ago, so I invented sandwiches. If you've ever eaten one, send me my money, please. So they bought the Patents in 2002, so when were the Patents Filled? Because the first "users to see the same virtual space as they interact with one another in real time" was in Action Quake in 1998 and Ultima Online that same year. Just to clarify, it was the first time that I played any kind of Multiplayer was with Action Quake and Ultima Online. Client Server real time gaming. I've noticed that everytime Pal Talk sues someone, they never actually filed the original

a record of all the jobs you've applied to. © 2009 American Association for the Advancement of Science. You have reached the bottom of the page. PatentFizz now covering published applications>: Now you can generate a FizzDisplay for any published US application for patent. Oh, and now anyone can attach any comment to any published app, too. Official Gazette reinstatement notices - 2007 week no. 52>: The Official Gazette published by the Patent and Trademark Office this week includes reinstatement notices for 49 patents that had previously expired due to a failure to pay applicable maintenance

Development of said patent within six-twelve months should be mandatory, because the point is to protect you from competition while you are developing the product in order to foster innovation and allow for the country to move forward. If you're just sitting on it, you're holding everyone else back, and that defeats the purpose of IP protection. Hmm, the existence of MUDs prior to the filing of this patent (and online multiplayer going back to Net Trek back when the internet was like ten bored scientists working on various government-funded projects) should blow the whole suit right out of