Archive for January, 2010

Brad Feld’s “Do Patents Slow Down Innovation?” – with comments


2010
01.31

I decided to re-post Brad Feld’s latest blog along with a few personal experiences to support his topic.

Speaking with Entrepreneurs every week who are worried if their product will ‘infringe’ on someone’s patent.  Better yet they wonder if all or part of their application has to be patentable in order to receive funding.  Most don’t have the money to find out either way.

I agree with Brad that software patents slow down innovation.  Most entrepreneurs can’t afford to pay the ‘vig’ (explained below) so they soldier on and pray they don’t get noticed by the patent police.  Some soldier on and hope they can grow large enough before they get noticed… oh wait, isn’t that a legal strategy?

Example 1: Spoke with an entrepreneur who was interviewed by litigators just to see if they were large enough to bring suit. Good for them, they were found unworthy.  It makes me wondered what happens then, does the entrepreneur get placed on the ‘patient no fly list‘ in case they fly above a certain value, or better yet board an unexpecting company willing to purchase?

Example 2: How about the entrepreneur who get’s a letter staing he’s infringing on a patient, then finds out his patient was filed 3 months before. I here the saying, “Patients are only valuable if your willing to defend them” and defending them takes money, a lot of money.  Did that company try to bully the entrepreneur out of the market with a lawsuit?  I think so, but surprise! the entrepreneur decided to pursue the lawsuit and drown themselves in legal fees because they, “won’t be bullied.”  My point is now both companies are spending valuable energy worrying about the lawsuit and not working on their products. — and further innovation.

After reading Brad’s post I would love to hear your comments…

********************************************

Feed: Feld Thoughts
Posted on: Saturday, January 30, 2010 6:26 PM
Author: Brad Feld
Subject: Do Patents Slow Down Innovation?

I had a very interesting meeting yesterday with an MIT Professor who I’ve known for a long time.  He is anti-software patent, as am I.  However, he suggested something I hadn’t really spent much time thinking about, namely that patents slow down innovation.  Some very credible folks have been talking about this for a little while, including James Bessen and Michael Meurer in their excellent book Patent Failure: How Judges, Bureaucrats, and Lawyers Put Innovators at Risk.

In my conversation Friday, I heard a very interesting example.  Regularly, patent advocates tell me how important patents are for the biotech and life science industries.  However, there apparently is academic research in the works that shows that patents actually slow down innovation in biotech.  The specific example we discussed was that there is increasing evidence that when a professor or company gets a patent in the field of genetics research, other researchers simply stop doing work in that specific area.  As a result, the number of researchers on a particular topic decreases, especially if the patent is broad.  It’s not hard to theorize that this results in less innovation around this area over time.

I’m just starting to read some papers about this stuff, including those by MIT Professor Fiona Murray.  If you are interested, Stuart Macdonald’s paper When means become ends: considering the impact of patent strategy on innovation frames the discussion nicely.  And Stephan Kinsella’s excellent essay Reducing the Cost of IP Law absolutely nails this.

I’m still obsessed with my mission to “abolish software patents” especially after receiving yet another email from a new startup that claims to be a “Patent Insurance Company.”  A number of these have popped up recently in the past few years, including several that are funded by VCs.  Their pitch is that you pay them an annual fee, license any patents you have to them, and they will “protect you” against any patent litigation.  Whenever I hear this pitch, all I can think about is Al Capone walking the streets of Chicago going door to door offering “protection” to all of the local businessmen if they will pay his vig every week.


View article…

Ms. L’s recommended iPhone apps for students


2010
01.26

I have removed the names to protect the innocent, but this is an actual email from my son’s 3rd grade teacher.  My son’s teacher sends several emails each week on various topics.  We love her dedication and commitment to educating our children and also going above and beyond with helpful information about technology and outside learning tools.

Thank you Ms. L for all you do!!

>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

Parents,

I’ve talked to a couple of you about the use of educational apps on the iPhone or iPod touch. If you are interested, our technology specialist sent us a list of educational apps she found that can be used by elementary sutdents. All of these apps are free and the math ones are a great way for students to practice math skills with their iPod..have fun!

<Son’s 3rd Grade Teacher’s name was here>

3rd Grade Teacher

……. This is forward from our school districts head of technology:

Parents may be asking for apps to use on their phones with their children. Here is a list of free, fun, and educational iPhone Apps. Below list is a little research that I found interesting concerning cell phone use and children.
3D Brain
ABC Phonics Animals Lite Free
Balloonimals Lite
Brain Blaze Add
Brain Blaze Divide
Brain Blaze Multiply
Brain Blaze Subtract
Brain Blaze WhichWord
Convert Units for Free
Daily History
Dictionary.com
Doodle Buddy
Dragon Dictation
Dragon Search
Evernote
iDaily
iPDF
Learn Stocks
Masterpiece Art
Math Drills Lite
NASA App
Shakespeare: Macbeth
Word Spy – Free

………. some very interesting facts:

Kids, Parents, and Cell Phones

  • The average 13 to 17-year-old sends 2000 text messages a month!
  • The average age to first own a cell phone is between 9 and 10.
  • The average age to borrow a cell phone is 8.
  • By age 12, fully three-fourths of all children have their own mobile phone.
  • Parental use of advanced data services mirrors that of their tween kids. If their children text, then 80% of parents will text as well.
  • Nearly 60% of parents of cell phone-owing kids have forbidden downloads of games, ringtones, and videos, the extra items that often incur a charge.

An article you might be interested in:

SUMMARY: When is a phone not a phone? In the hands of children and tweens, today’s cell phones are primarily used as text messaging devices, cameras, gaming consoles, video viewers, MP3 players, and incidentally, as mobile phones via the speaker capability so their friends can chime in on the call. Parents are getting dialed in to the social media phenomenon and beginning to understand—and limit—how children use new media. link

<name was here>
Campus Instructional Technologist

CW

Effective Pitching Seminar in Dallas – Fort Worth


2010
01.25

Babar Bhatti, Chair of the MIT Enterprise Forum DFW Chapter and CEO/Founder of MutualMind, is hosting an “Effective Pitching” this Thursday night. Here’s the scoop from the MIT Forum site:

MIT Enterprise Forum DFW Chapter is pleased to announce our January event: Effective Pitching.

As an entrepreneur you have often heard about the elevator pitch. There is more to pitching than 30 second pitches. It is critical for entrepreneurs to sell their ideas and products to customers and investors. Can you effectively communicate the value of your products and ideas? Do you know what does it take to sell to a CEO? What are the things that investors want to hear? Our panel of experts will share what works and what does not work.

Learn the rules for Effective Pitching with:
* Jeff Crilley, an Emmy award winning communication expert
* Laurence Briggs, President of InvestIn Forum, Private Investor Network
* JR Atkins, Sales specialist and social media speaker

Date: Jan 28, 5.30pm.
Location: Company|Dallas, Floor 2, 1701 N Collins Blvd, Richardson TX 75080
Cost: $20 including Food and refreshments.
Registration: Register here – limited seating.

About MIT Enterprise Forum DFW Chapter

The Dallas-Fort Worth Chapter of MIT Enterprise Forum is focused on supporting technology entrepreneurs in the DFW metroplex. The group is open to anyone who is interested in technology entrepreneurship. You don’t have to be a MIT alumni to be involved.

Back from a hard drive crash


2010
01.12

After spending the last 36 hours restoring my laptop with countless updates, patches, software installations, database restorations arghhh… But its a new year and optimism is in the air. So here is the list of applications I installed – in order:

  • Toshiba Restore CD (w/ version 1.0 of Microsoft Windows Vista)
  • Windows Update and 6 reboots
  • McAfee, Update, Update, Update (OK I’m safe – continue)
  • Microsoft Office 2003 (w/o Outlook)
  • Windows Update and 6 more reboots
  • Microsoft Outlook 2003
  • Windows Update and 5 more reboots
  • Microsoft Visio
  • Windows Update Vista SP1 (3rd time was a charm)
  • Windows Update Vista SP2 (see the trend here)
  • Google Calendar Sync
  • Pogoplug Software
  • Tweetdeck
  • Quicken 2010 (log into online account – download – restore back-up – done!!!)
  • Adobe Acrobat 9 (upg from 8. something)
  • Several Web Services
  • Mozilla
  • iTunes
  • Skype
  • Google Chrome

Did I miss anything?

CW