back to article California judge hauls in Samsung CEO, bigwigs for Apple to grill

Apple's lawyers have won the opportunity to give Samsung chief Gee Sung Choi the third degree in the US patent battle between the tech giants. Californian district judge Lucy Koh has granted Apple permission to get a deposition from the CEO, but has limited it to two hours. Courts get a say on so-called "apex" depositions …

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  1. Silverburn
    Facepalm

    Next...Apple lawyers will challenge Sumsung lawyers to a game of "paper, rock, scissors" to decide who's spelling of 'Applet' is correct. Best of 500, or the first one to top 1m in lawyers fees wins.

    Anyone else sick of this shit yet?

    1. Blunderbuss
      Unhappy

      Very sick of it

      Fed up with two tech giants wearing each other out whilst the lawyers get fat off the profits.

      They should be spending the cash on R&D and giving the consumers real progress and innovation.

      Yes, I realise that protecting that R&D is worthwhile, but the current system only benefits the lawyers. Spend the cash lobbying for a better patent system, fix it and then get back to giving us great new products.

      1. Giles Jones Gold badge

        Re: Very sick of it

        But have you noticed Apple tends to sue based on design and UI patents but Samsung and others sue Apple relating to low level hardware patents?

        Doesn't that say a lot? when has Samsung claimed that the iOS UI has infringed their work? never as far as I know.

        Patents on the chips under the hood is pretty irrelevant for the most part. The most important part is the CPU core and that's a licenced design from ARM. The software is what make all that otherwise useless chippery do something interesting.

        1. MikeS

          Re: Very sick of it

          .. oh you mean like making rectangular devices, and swiping your finger sideways across a touch screen.

          Those apple peope are so clever (at getting dodgy patents approved anyway )

        2. asdf
          FAIL

          Re: Very sick of it

          >Patents on the chips under the hood is pretty irrelevant for the most part.

          Yep who cares about voice quality and data speed/connectivity on a smart phone (things the chips besides the cpu provide)? Its all about the fart apps. Wow you fail.

  2. sterling

    Close but no cigar

    They are speaking to the wrong guys. R&D would rather take his life than betray Samsung or his management, the other stooges are STA, which had nothing to do with the decision to copy Apple. STA are just marketing.

    They should start with the senior Product Management team in Korea, who made the call (yes, they did) with JK. But again, these guys would rather be shot than betray their companies/management/families/country, even for a US court, so this, sadly, won't go anywhere.

  3. g e
    Meh

    Applet

    A Java term predating iThings if I'm not mistaken ?

    Or did they licence that along with ios (Cisco), iphone (Fujitsu?) and (perhaps not...) ipad (Proview) ?

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Applet

      I think you're right in that.

      I always thought that 'app' as in 'there's an app for that' was short for 'application' which is a fairly crap word to describe a program if ever there was. Though I do kind of get the distinction.

      Any body know the origin of the Word App?

      1. Admiral Grace Hopper

        Word App?

        Cameo

        1. Anonymous Coward
          Happy

          Re: Word App?

          Well done

  4. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    If someone goes to a court asking for someone else's product to be removed from circulation because of a patent dispute, then BOTH companies should be forced to pull their product until the issue is resolved one way or the other.

    If that were the case, perhaps companies would talk a little more and litigate less.

    1. Silverburn
      Thumb Up

      Actually not a bad idea!

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      So the innocent get punished along with the guilty. A great way to stifle innovation. No one would dare produce anything

      1. Silverburn

        @ AC

        ...and we're not heading in that direction already?

  5. Sirius Lee

    Control panel applets

    Microsoft has been calling the mini applications usually launched from the Windows control panel 'applets' since there's been a control panel.

    I'm sure there are much older references which could be found with a bit of effort, but search for the term has this link at the top of page 2 to a 2002 article referring to control panel applets:

    http://www.pctools.com/guides/registry/detail/522/

    According to the OED the suffix -et (or -ette) is borrowed from french (as many words such a table are) and can mean:

    denoting relatively small size

    denoting an imitation or substitute

    denoting female gender

    Now I'm sure that when choosing the prefix 'app' Microsoft had only one idea in mind - that the programs run from the control panel are (app)lications. Not, for example, (app)liances, (app)aling or (app)ealing. Being focused on assisting with the configuration of a small sub-set of the OS it was understandable they would want to convey idea by using the commonly used -et suffix with its implication of the named thing being small.

    So the term 'applet' has not only prior art but is the joining of acommon contraction and a common suffix. No judge is going to side with Apple on this one.

    1. Michael Wojcik Silver badge

      Re: Control panel applets

      > Microsoft has been calling the mini applications usually launched from the Windows control

      > panel 'applets' since there's been a control panel.

      I don't believe that's true, actually. Windows/286 (Windows 2.11) had a Control Panel, but it didn't have applets - just a bunch of static controls:

      http://www.digibarn.com/collections/software/microsoft/windows286/Image55.jpg

      I think the applet-style control panel was introduced with Windows 95. I don't recall offhand whether the term "applet" appeared in the window decorations or documentation, and I'm not going to bother booting it up to check. (Of course I still have Win95 images lying around, just like I have MS-DOS and OS/2 and ancient versions of Linux. If the hardware hadn't died on me, I'd still have AIX 3.2 and Solaris 2.5 and HP-UX 9.mumble, too.) But I believe Microsoft did start using the term sometime in the mid-1990s.

      I know it was commonly used in Java by 1997, since I have two books right here with 1997 copyright dates (_Presenting Javabeans_ and _Java and CORBA_) that use it. If memory serves, Netscape used the term "applet" for embedded Java programs when they introduced the APP element (which became APPLET in Netscape 2.0, and then was incorporated into HTML 3.2, and eventually superseded by OBJECT) in 1995. In any case, Netscape 2.0 had APPLET in 1996, so the term was widely used in its current sense by then.

      > No judge is going to side with Apple on this one.

      I find your abundance of faith disturbing.

      1. stanimir

        Re: Control panel applets

        the class in java is java.applet.Applet and exists since version java1.0 (or 0.9) i.e. '95-96.

      2. Michael Wojcik Silver badge

        Re: Control panel applets

        Boy, there's really no telling what will get a thumbs-down. One of these days I'm going to try to train an HMM to predict it.

    2. chr0m4t1c

      Re: Control panel applets

      >So the term 'applet' has not only prior art but is the joining of acommon contraction and a common suffix. No judge is going to side with Apple on this one.

      Well that's fine because that's not what the case is about, this was/will be a ruling over the definition of the term, not who thought it up.

      Apple are suing Samsung over design patents, Samsung are suing Apple over technical patents; these are not the same thing and they are important for different but also surprisingly similar reasons.

      Technical patents protect the R&D time and money you pour into bits that make things work, design patents protect the time and money you pour into making something usable or nice to look at. It's very easy to use the simplistic (and incorrect) argument that Apple are claiming to have invented the rectangle, but design is very important and can make your mediocre product into a desirable icon just as quickly as it can turn your brilliant product into a total flop.

      Look at the original VW Beetle or Fiat 500 or Mini, all quite bad cars, but still selling years later and then look at the Renault Avantime, actually quite a good car for its time but sold less than 5,000 before Renault stopped production just 18 months into its planned 7 year life.

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