Archive for December, 2009

Stadium seating – designed for your comfort?

Friday, December 18th, 2009

When you visit a stadium, one of the first things that you notice is the kind of seating that is present in the baseball, football or basketball stadiums that you are standing in. Stadiums are meant to provide comfortable as well as unblocked views of the game in progress. The seats may be in the form of bleachers, individual or row seating based on the kind of construction and the layout of the stadium. Seating options are customized for the occasion and the kind of sport being played, in addition to the budget in consideration. Attendees can also look out for luxury venues that one can use the elevator to reach and get the kind of facilities and treatment that one expects from five star comforts.

Bleachers are generally exposed and not upholstered, which means that these are limited in comfort and luxury. Most stadiums however, have auxiliary upholstering to add to the un-uphostered structural parts and in some cases the chairs may be permanent too. Nowadays, the trend is to ensure that the outdoor parks as well as stadiums have ergonomic designs where the configuration of the seats keeps the users’ best comfort in mind.

In movie theaters, the trend has shifted in favor of seats that are similar to those found in the stadiums and not merely the ones which had the slightly inclined designs that were just mildly comfortable. In stadiums, the entrance is at the rear, with a ramp placed in the wall, where there are stairs on either side that lead up to the seats. It is sad but true that when it comes to people in wheelchairs, they are generally forced to take up position in the front rows, which are least preferred by other users. This is because that this position they have to strain and stretch their necks. With change in the air, some mobility sensitive theaters are adding in elevators specially for wheelchairs to help patrons reach the top rows.

Stadiums have seating based on the kind of sport being played on the ground. For one, football stadiums generally have bleacher, simple seats while baseball stadiums have seats in tiers with back and arms too. The seating in football stadiums, which is prevalent in some colleges to, is called stepped seating where it is possible to step over the seats and across the aisles too.

Having backrests to the seats increases the comfort level of sports spectators with some of the possible options being quite inexpensive too. These backrests can sometimes be used along with older bleachers and nowadays there are special seating arrangements for people with disabilities too.

What is implied by “the patent process”?

Friday, December 18th, 2009

Inventors need patent firms that can give them application and patent protection services. Having a patent law firm with experienced attorneys on your side can help you prevent others from using your intellectual property.

The patent process is generally very long. During this period, the application generally travels back and forth between the applicant and the patent examiner until both sides agree as to which part of the invention is worthy of a patent. The patent process generally involves filing a patent application and undergoing examination at the patent office. If examination is successful, a patent is granted and is enforceable for a limited term thereafter.

Inventions come in all shapes and sizes, and if your widget does nothing more than add one novel concept to a mountain of old concepts, that novel concept may just be patentable. So, for example, if your video game is an automobile racing game, you might use familiar concepts such as turbo boosting your car, damaging your car when collisions occur, and displaying a racer’s progress on a map of the race track, but at one point, displaying the racers was a novel idea, and perhaps patentable. Inventions which, if handled wisely, may fetch young and enthusiastic start-up entrepreneurs great success in terms of financial and global fame. Inventors not ready to file a full patent application are encouraged to file a “provisional patent application”. The provisional application provides more benefits and protections to inventors than the disclosure document.

Design applications require formal drawings (like of cup holders) when filed since the look of the invention as shown in the drawings is the basis of the application. A draftsman with many years experience in preparing formal patent drawings is usually available for this service to clients. Design patents (these patents are concerned with the aesthetic appearance of the invention) must be generally within one year of the idea’s conception. Design patents of this type tend to have a term of 14 years.

Utility patents, on the other hand, are applied for when the invention you wish to protect has a use such as a machine, ingredients, medicines, computers, etc. A provisional utility patent application is less common and not something you need to understand at an introductory level. Utility patents are granted for inventions such as new processes or machines. Not to be confused with design patents which are granted to inventors of new designs for articles that are manufactured.

Invention protection is important to manufacturers too. The manufacturer has the biggest investment at risk and they’ll take whatever steps are necessary to protect it. Inventiveness is good for consumers, monopoly power is bad for consumers, and we reward inventiveness by granting 17 years of monopoly power. It’s someone’s idea of a compromise between too little and too much. Inventions that come before your invention are referred to as “prior art”. The differences between your invention and the prior art need to be explained and defended in order for a patent to be granted.

What to do with that next great idea.

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

The scope of new products in the contemporary world is seemingly unending. A lot of companies and people look at getting data from other people who are a repository of information as well as ideas. It is possible to look at getting new product ideas based on exposing, recombining and surfacing data, with the internet being a fast and vast new medium of sharing and utilizing the data in a manner that helps cultivate new innovations.

Companies generally have a well set manner for laying out new product innovation. Ideas get sent from the business manager to the strategic committee that conducts the preliminary feasibility test after which regular reviews by the engineering team is conducted to make progress on the project.

The inputs from the developer or the development team are quite important as new product development is a tough task. It needs conversion of complex ideas into practical products which means that applied research is used as the input with development being the throughput and the finished marketable product being the output. Developers also take into account the kind of costs that are required to bring the product into fruition.

Past research is an indicator of what has already been done and not necessarily of what is needed for the future. It is also possible to use computer aided design (CAD) to visualize the product and also propel it towards better execution and implementation. Research teams can help, as they do a good job in predicting trends that will become big in future. They also test out ideas or concepts so that one may be able to access the chances of a product succeeding.

Some people are fast to take on and use new products. These people are called early adopters. There are others who take a little more time to adopt it and are known as the early majority. The late majority are those who are averse to risk, while there are the laggards that are quite resistant to change. These laggards may even take on products that have become the norm and quite well entrenched in the market.

You can use market research to ascertain the demand for a product and the kind of price that would be acceptable. A prototype may also be used to visualize the product (which we had made numberous times with our drink holder). Market research helps in factoring in the trends in the market too.

It is always better to make a product in the early life style stage of a product to maximize the potential of the product. Product design takes into account engineering, style and cost constraints too. Patents involve legal hassles that need to be factored in also.