- From: Marc Salomon <marc@ckm.ucsf.edu>
- Date: Mon, 18 Sep 1995 10:32:44 -0700
- To: www-talk@w3.org
UC and the Eolas founders are not trying to patent mobile code or active objects, rather networked, inlined, active objects instantiated during the process of rendering networked hypertext. The prototype on which the patent application is based is on an IPC model where the UA, based on information in the hypertext document, executes the appropriate helper application, negotiates resource requirements, and allows the app access to part of the rendered HTML window. Just the same way that TkWWW (an early Tk/tcl-based web browser), upon needing to render a gif, interacted with the external application xli to render inline. There is also a proprietary protocol to generalize this across platforms. I believe that there is only a reliable browsers are for the unix platforms at this time. The complexities of cross platform development is the reason that others avoided this issue earlier. Let's hope that the USPTO realizes that smarter prototype applications in and of themselves do not void prior art. I do not believe that Eolas founders and UC mean to patent the other Eolas products, most of which are the fruits of efforts of our group at UCSF, and are only known to Eolas by our common employment history at UCSF, as we have not packaged nor released them. [For some time, without my knowledge nor consent, I was listed as one of the Eolas' /pub/people on their ftp site. I have never been employed with Eolas nor have I ever worked towards software patents.] Of course, Eolas could put such technological speculation to rest by releasing their patent request and license agreement with UC, since all relevant information has published at one time or another on the web and since all of the development work involved was done on the public dollar. -marc
Received on Monday, 18 September 1995 13:36:18 UTC