Microsoft Gaming Patents — Where They're Going 69
An anonymous reader writes "BNET looked at some patents which suggest that Microsoft might be thinking about an integrated game console/set-top box. Quoting: 'Patent 20080167128 is for watching television on a game console, while patent 20080167127 covers switching a gaming console between various media, including television, video, music, and games, and even using the console as a set-top box. Clearly Microsoft has been interested in controlling the living room, and combining media, gaming, and set-top functions in a single device would make a great deal of sense.' There are also hints of mobile gaming that support the current round of rumors about a combination Xbox-Zune. "
IP TV (Score:4, Informative)
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Sony and Microsoft have their consoles able to connect to the net, play DVDs etc. They know that if they can get the trojan horse in the home, they can sell peripherals designe
Prior Art ? (Score:1, Informative)
It's staggering that Microsoft would get a patent on something which seems blatantly obvious as the next feature on a TV based console. It's no surprise that they applied for it however.
Obvious, indeed. Isn't there already a ton of such attempt at multi-functional devices already ?
Countless of do-it-yourself, small form factor PCs sitting under the TV set and featuring, TV reception, DVR functions, multimedia player, and console emulators ?
The patent was only filed in 2007. Whereas the mini-ITX [wikipedia.org] format which spawned so much of these home theater PCs dates back 2001.
And building multi-function boxes has so much been a hot topic, that in 2002, a whole 5 years before Microsoft even files a pat
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The End is Nigh! (Score:2, Funny)
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And we are all going to pay Microsoft Tax for every device we own, in all from microwave ovens to calculators.
Xbox 360 MCE (Score:3, Interesting)
Sony has prior art. (Score:2)
PSX.
PSX was the internal codename for the playstation, it was also the name of a DVR/Music/Movie/Set Top Box/PS2 combo in Japan for Satellite services.
This is going to be a little interesting.
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It really comes down to "when is a Gaming Console not a computer?"
Once a device is officially user-programmable, then it's a computer. This already applies to the PLAYSTATION 3; it would apply to the Xbox 360 if Creators Club had a lifetime subscription instead of an annual subscription.
Been there, done that (Score:3, Interesting)
I already did that on the original xbox
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Not only that.. but there has been a mythtv frontend [mythtv.org] for the Xbox for almost 10 years.
Shouldn't that count for something in terms of prior art?
Clearly Microsoft was not the first one to think about watching TV and switching between games and different types of media on a game console / general purpose computing platform.
Easier target candidate (Score:5, Insightful)
I'd simply ask them what they did with it? (Score:2)
I think patent trolls could be easily taken care of if they had to put up or shut up.
If you've actually built a device with the idea then I'd have to pay, if not, screw you.
I could patent cabling to devices together, would that get me the rights to shake down everybody who'd ever wired two pieces of crap together?
I think not.
combination Xbox-Zune (Score:1, Funny)
> combination Xbox-Zune
Who would want a brown game console that looks like a turd ?
Patenting away the competition (Score:2, Troll)
I bet the idea is, Zune would have been a success if it wasn't for all the other (better) MP3-players out there. Especially IPods.
Hey, MS? Just because there is no alternative, people still won't buy crap. That only works in markets you have cornered. Everywhere else, you gotta make what people want or they just won't buy it.
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But, were they features people actually wanted, or just some extra bells and whistles that only a few people will ever need, use, or even know about? I don't think in the years I've owned iPods I've ever felt there were features I wish it had.
Geek-cool or cool-people cool? Because, quite frankly, they're very different.
Cheers
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It was just marketed poorly and could beat the Ipod's cool factor.
Geek-cool or cool-people cool? Because, quite frankly, they're very different.
Don't hurt yourself thinking about this question, I realize it's very difficult.
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*shrug* If you think those are useful, glad you liked them. I have no interest in playing games on my music player, or my phone. :-P
No, seriously. Because the Zune never matched the cool factor of the iPod. Outside of the har
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Zune guy is no more
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FBbOBc-L720 [youtube.com]
I don't know if he went back to Zune-ism, since then.
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I dont think that wireless syncing is a killer feature for a mp3 player.
Most people wouldnt be interested in it.
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But, were they features people actually wanted, or just some extra bells and whistles that only a few people will ever need, use, or even know about? I don't think in the years I've owned iPods I've ever felt there were features I wish it had.
I bought an 80-GB Zune because:
1) The Zune software is FAR superior to iTunes. My Zune actually broke (the screen cracked) a few months ago, but I'm still using the Zune software to manage my collection-- iTunes is only used for my iPhone.
2) The Zune has an FM radio an
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squirting is one feature idon't want
except in my gf
including television (Score:1, Interesting)
Some years ago MS had a survey done that found that in most homes the computer and the TV were in the same room in the house. The conclusion they came to was that people wanted to watch TV on their computer.
No!, Wrong!, people didn't have 22 room mansions with separate computer labs and home theatres. They have their stuff in one room because they only have one room, or one living room.
The idea of a combination TV/computer/gaming/VCR is also based on everyone having their own computer, or probably several,
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Why stop at two? I've always wanted one of those big wall-o-monitor dealios you see on TV. :-P
Cheers
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Sarah: "Mum, why can't I watch TV?"
Mum: "Well, the TV/Computer/Game Console is broken."
or:
Sarah: "I want to watch TV."
David: "I want to play Halo 10."
Mum: "Sorry, but I'm using the TV/Computer/Gaming Console at the moment to write up my report."
fuck you, use you, scar you, break you (Score:2)
David: "I want to play Halo 10."
Mum: "Sorry, but I'm using the TV/Computer/Gaming Console"
Why would Mum even let David listen to Further Down the Spiral by Nine Inch Nails [wikipedia.org]?
Have a PC? No split-screen for you. (Score:2)
The idea of a combination TV/computer/gaming/VCR is also based on everyone having their own computer, or probably several, and not having to share.
That's the mindset that PC game publishers appear to work from. Often, the PC version of a video game won't have a split- or otherwise shared-screen option for HTPC owners even if the console versions have it. More often, party games just don't get ported to PC at all.
Actually just applications (Score:5, Insightful)
These are actually just published applications, not patents (you can tell because the number starts with the publication year, whereas patent numbers are just serial numbers in increasing order roughly by date of issuance).
What's interesting is that the first one linked is specifically limited to a game console, while the second one sounds as though a MythTV box with MythGame/MAME would read on most, if not all, of the claims (whether under anticipation or obviousness depends on whether you consider a MythTV box with MythGame to be a game console).
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whether under anticipation or obviousness depends on whether you consider a MythTV box with MythGame to be a game console
Of course, you've been able to run mythfrontend on an Xbox for many years, and I'd say the Xbox might qualify as a game console. Maybe that's what they're trying to get around by explicitly stating something about the dashboards 'nativeness' to the console.
I cant see anything that doesn't have at least one, if not two decades of prior art, and/or isn't obvious to anyone who hasn't been li
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They never really define "native", though, so one could say that as long as the code is written as "native" for the processor (i.e., it's compiled into directly machine-executable code and not running on a Java VM or something like that), then it's "native".
Self Preservation (Score:1)
Prior art everywhere (Score:3, Informative)
Dude I think a 'multimedia PC' (computer with CDROM or one that can play video) from the 1990's is enough to qualify as prior art here.
Furthermore what about the old computers that plugged into the TV? They were a do-everything device for the telly equipped with:
* A media drive that handled music (cassette tape),
* They downloaded new media (modem),
* AND did video in various crazy analogue ways (tv tuner).
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invention vs innovation (Score:5, Insightful)
When America stopped Inventing and started Innovating was the beginning of the decline. When Bell created the telephone it was an Invention. When the RIAA finds a new way to sue people its an Innovation. Creating a new lifsaving medication, Invention. Offering crippled versions of Windows at different price points, Innovation.
Innovation is a term lawers and marketing goons use to glorify their often nauseating and sometimes unethical practices.
Regarding the article. It's not an invention with a product in mind. It's ammunition for their arsenal of potential patent litigation intended to coerce compliance from competitors. In a word, an innovation. Not news, move along.
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This is a hypothetical nightmare for some patent trolls which they will lobby tooth and nail to ensure never comes to
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So THAT's why it costs several thousand dollars to use free technology and it's related invented technologies...
Epilepsy warning (Score:2)
Here we go: (Score:2, Funny)
Huh? (Score:4, Interesting)
So, they're either trying to patent the general-purpose computer, or they're trying to say that merging your home theatre into one single component is a unique invention.
I mean, you've been able to watch TV, movies, play music, and play games on a Mac for, what, 10+ years now? And you can easily make a PC do all of this as well (most of it right out of the box). And by changing the settings on my amplifier, I can choose between music, movies, video games, and the radio.
All they're doing is taking functionality which has been available individually, as well as already integrated into the function of a computer, and adding one more thing -- being a gaming console. None of these sound like they should be patentable -- you can't take something people do all of the time, and patent the idea of doing it all in one box. That makes no sense to me.
Have patents really devolved to "take what we can already do, put it in a box that also plays video games" and have that somehow be an innovation??
I would argue that the entire computer industry (Microsoft included) has produced enough prior art as to seemingly completely invalidate this entire patent.
Cheers
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Have patents really devolved to "take what we can already do, put it in a box that also plays video games" and have that somehow be an innovation??
Yes.
Prior Art (Score:2)
patent 20080167127 covers switching a gaming console between various media, including television, video, music, and games
Wow, that sounds just like a remote control.
Not a fan of combo devices (Score:2)
It's only my opinion, obviously - but I've always felt that combo devices may be adequate in what they do, never do any one thing really well. Printer/Fax/Copiers, phone/cameras, etc. just don't seem to excel. Plus there's the obvious issue with having to replace all functions when any single one stops working - like those old TV/VCR combos.
In this specific instance, I wouldn't personally think Microsoft to be capable of designing a slick enough TV recording system (yes I've seen Media PCs) for this to be a
Gaming console rented as set top box (Score:2, Insightful)
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Patents suck (Score:3, Informative)
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> If you can patent these things, patents have become truly useless and sucky.
These aren't patents. They are patent applications.
> Devices that are both TV and gaming device are so old. Even cellular phones do it. Oh
> and PC's of course.
Did you read the claims? If not you have no idea what they are trying to patent.
> Lawyers are truly, really, degrading human progress.
It's the politicians that make the laws, not the lawyers.
Watching tv on a console? (Score:2)
There were tv addons for existing games consoles years ago... I believe the sega genesis had one available for it, and the ps3 certainly does.
They are going to be jerks like with OS market? (Score:2)
Hm, let's see... they are going to be raving chair-throwing anti-competitive ass-holes like the OS market? What else would you possibly expect? Why would they be any different? They see a market that they can take over, so they go for it.
Nothing new here. Move on. (Score:2)
There's nothing new here. The UltimateTV folks are working on XBOX360 to take over where the PS3 left off: make an affordable "everything" machine for your TV. Microsoft has a golden opportunity to truly achieve where Sony horribly failed.
What a foolish endear for Microsoft to pursue (Score:1)
I can see the thinking, expand on the 360 market, add new features, use what you alre
Fits my purchase policy (Score:1)