Well I guess it's a happy ending; I'll let you decide. This tale is from C|net's coverage of
a recent Ocean Tomo patent auction. I've
written about the organization before.
Realtor Martin Eldridge, for instance, got $1 million for a location-based application that combines GPS-like data with information services. If you walk by a painting rapidly in a museum, for example, you might just get the name of the painter sent to your cell phone. If you pause, it might forward you the date it was painted and other details.
He came up with the idea while driving down Highway 1 in California.
Taking bids by phone. Many bidders call in their bids by phone to maintain secrecy. Phone buyers, however, will also have observers in the room.
(Credit: Ocean Tomo)
"I wanted to know what I was driving by," he said, elated and sipping champagne. He wrote Google, Garmin, Microsoft (all of whom have extensive patent portfolios that the rigorously defend) and several other companies about licensing. None responded. The auction gave him a way to make some money off of it.
Comments
August 7
Well,
Where is the concern? - using a [...]
jay parrish about National Geospatial Advisory Committee Endorses IFTN, Looks for Input
August 7
The actual resolution says:
"NGAC fully [...]
Lars Kristian Stölen about OneGeology-Deeper Dive into the Portal
August 7
The technology of the OneGeology portal [...]
MagicBadger about New Apple Tagging Patent App - Includes LBS Ad Implementation
August 7
Seems rather similar to the RadioTAG [...]
Jaap Groot about Loopt Offers New (Cheaper) Deal to Carriers
August 7
The cost to use GPS on a phone is 0, at [...]
Mike Dobson about Painless Location Mapping for Web Pages
August 6
I like the concept and the execution. [...]
Luc Vaillancourt about Penfield, NY Goes 3D with Skyline
August 6
...Skyline is somehow "hot" in France, [...]