Blog

  • Madrid Protocol: Challenges Facing Trademark Filers

    Switching gears this week to the “T” in USPTO, one issue trademark practitioners will be dealing with soon is the filing of affidavits for a registered extension of protection under the Madrid Protocol. The first affidavit will come due between February 1, 2010, and February 1, 2011.  Absent a legislative change to treat these affidavits the same as those for other trademark registrations (more on this below), owners and practitioners will need to take extra special care to adjust their docketing procedures and systems and verify all filing deadlines in these Madrid Protocol cases.

    As trademark practitioners know, the requirement of submission of affidavits of use in commerce or excusable nonuse is needed to maintain all trademark registrations and to help clear the register of inactive marks. The requirements for these affidavits, however, differ for registered extensions of protection filed under the Madrid Protocol.

    The current statutory scheme neither affords them the same “grace periods” for late filing, nor does it provide the ability to correct deficiencies after the due date for registered extensions of protection under the Madrid Protocol. For all other U.S. trademark registrations, the statute provides a six-month grace period and the ability to correct deficiencies.  For registered extensions of protection, however, the statute provides no grace period for the first affidavit, and a shorter three-month grace period for subsequent affidavits.

    The USPTO is well-aware of the challenges facing trademark owners and practitioners in adjustments to docketing procedures and systems, as well as costly adjustments to the USPTO workflow and systems if this disparity is not amended. The USPTO supports legislative changes to rectify these discrepancies and treat registered extensions of protection consistently with other U.S. trademark registrations.

    While looking forward to legislative changes, practitioners and trademark owners need to start thinking now about how to effectively manage the registered extensions of protection, and how to avoid inadvertent cancellation while the legislation remains pending. A good starting point would be reviewing registration portfolios and flagging registered extensions of protection issued in 2005. I also strongly encourage filers to confirm the accuracy of all filing deadlines for registered extensions of protection, and to file as early as possible during the statutory period. An early filing minimizes the impact of oversights and errors that may occur in last-minute filings.

    I look forward to working together with trademark owners and practitioners to address these important issues.

  • The world of Square Enix now has a currency

    Fabula Nova Crystallis, Crystal Chronicles, Crystal Bearers, Crystal Meth. Totally kidding about that last one, but you get the idea Square Enix loves crystals…possibly more than their other favorite word, “chaos”. At any rate, the crystal-lovin’

  • Surge protection for HEOL industrial GPS clocks / time servers

    Heol Design offers now an effective solution against surge protection for its GPS systems.
    The Citel surge protectors have been selected to solve surge protection issues when GPS antennas are located outside buildings.
    These surge protectors must be mounted directly on antenna cables of GPS clocks / Time servers T100, T101, T103 and T116.

  • SCROLL_line SL Range Compressors

    For oil-free compressed air
    Renner GmbH offers a wide range of oil-free compressors in the lower and medium capacity range. The new SCROLL_line SL range is based on a scroll compressor system with absolute oil-free operation. The compression process occurs by means of a fixed and an eccentric rotating spiral, with no mechanical contact. The SCROLL_line SL range offers compressors with power outputs of 1.5 to 16,5 kW (1.890 lit/min – 67cfm) and 8 or 10 bar allowable working pressures. Various types of SCROLL_line compressors are available:
    – as an automatic base-plate unit (also for OEM- installation),
    – mounted on pressure vessels,
    – on pressure vessels with attached refrigeration dryer as well as
    – multiple units where 2 or 3 compressors operate independently on a common air-receiver

  • Google Docs Gets a Couple of Updates and Some Holiday Cheer

    Google is always updating its products but it has seen a flurry of activity lately as engineers are working on finishing their work before the holidays. Google Docs is no exception and the team has introduced a couple of new features, the co-editor presence notification for presentations being one of them, and a bunch of holiday-related themes and templates.

    “Today, we launched real time presence to Google Docs presentations as well. Now, when editing a presentation with a co-editor, you can see which slides he is editing, and if he is editing the same slide, then you can see which element — text box, shape, image, video, etc. — he is editing,” Roshni Malani, software engineer at Google Docs, wrote.

    The new feature is rather self-evident and certainly welcomed as the Docs bills itself as a collaboration suite and touts this as one of its main selling points. The feature had been available for the spreadsheet editor in Docs, where it was crucial to ensure that users didn’t write over each other. Now presentations get the same treatment allowing users to work together remotely without interfering with each other’s work.

    “The Google Docs team is celebrating the holiday season with holiday themes in Google forms and holiday templates in the Google Docs template gallery,” Eric Bogs and Bob Rose, software engineer… (read more)

  • Quick Spin: Mitsubishi i is a good car with a bad name

    Filed under: , , , , ,

    Mitsubishi i – Click above for high-res image gallery

    We’re looking at a long, nearly straight, almost totally traffic-free downhill. We’d climbed up to the base of the Palm Springs to Idyllwild Ariel Tramway. Our goal was to see how fast Mitsubishi’s tiny i could go. We’re on the gas, and the teensy, turbocharged 660cc three-banger is giving us all its got. The speedometer ticks upwards, now cresting 100. In front of us is nothing but inviting tarmac. Deeper and harder we push and the numbers keep ticking up. 119, 120, 121 and then finally hitting 122. We felt we left a little on the table and could have probably achieved a terminal velocity of around 130. Maybe. 125 for sure.

    Before you crime and punishment types climb upon your soapboxes, we should mention that the right-hand drive, JDM-only i reads out in kilometers per hour. Meaning that our top speed was almost 76 mph. And we stand by our assertion that we totally could have hit 80 mph.

    Photos by Drew Phillips / Copyright (C)2009 Weblogs, Inc.

    Continue reading Quick Spin: Mitsubishi i is a good car with a bad name

    Quick Spin: Mitsubishi i is a good car with a bad name originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 15 Dec 2009 11:56:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Sony’s HID-C10 Wi-Fi Enabled Television Accessory “Home Information Device” Hits The FCC


    Untitled-1

    Sony has filed a fresh new FCC report that gives me visions of Terminator’s whole Skynet saga. For those of you who don’t recall, Skynet was an artificially intelligent system which became self-aware and revolted against its creators. Perhaps things aren’t that dramatic (for now), but with a name like “Home Information Device,” aka HID-C10, what would you think? Regardless, this is a new device that Sony is bringing to the market sometime in 2010. We don’t have a lot of information yet, but we believe this product is connected to TV as the Television Engineering Group in Sony are handling the FCC filing. It has 801.11b/g, but its Wi-Fi certification lists it in the category of “Display Device (eg. television, monitor, picture frame).” Wha? How can this be a Display Device? Maybe they label accessories like that, but if it was just a router I believe it would say so.

    I’m confused. One theory I have is that this could possibly be some sort of emitter that works in conjunction with 3D active shutter glasses. If that was the case though, why would it be a seperate adapter? Is this the accessory that will come with Sony 3D TV’s? It’s possible because the confidentiality agreement on several key elements in the FCC report is labeled for May 31st, 2010. So this may or may not be at CES – perhaps a tease, or totally nonexistent. Another plausible theory is that this could just be another Wi-Fi adapter for a television somehow, perhaps one that would work with a broader range of TV’s so they can connect to the Sony Online Service, which we explored previously in a rather in depth article.

    This information is a Sony Insider exclusive, brought to you here first.

    hidc10

  • Muncy visits Airmen in South Pole’s ‘Deep Freeze’

    The Air National Guard’s top enlisted leader returned here this week after
    visiting Air Guard members involved in Operation Deep Freeze in Antarctica and in
    Christchurch, New Zealand…

  • Army, Air Guard miss recruiting goals

    Both the Army and Air National Guard missed their recruiting goals for November, but
    Guard officials said the smaller numbers were intentional…

  • Wyatt visits 148th Fighter Wing

    Lt. Gen. Harry “Bud” Wyatt, the director of the Air National Guard, visited the
    148th Fighter Wing here today touring the facilities and meeting the
    people…

  • ‘Balancing act’ stresses reservists, general says

    Reservists face unique challenges that may be tipping their stress level over that
    of their active-duty counterparts, a health affairs official said…

  • PEC visits TEC to explore collaboration opportunities

    Leadership from The Lavern E. Weber National Guard Bureau Professional Education
    Center (PEC) visited The I.G. Brown Air National Guard Training and Education Center
    here to explore opportunities for collaboration between the two training centers,
    Dec. 8…

  • Oregon Guard joins search for missing hikers

    The Oregon National Guard launched a UH-60 Blackhawk helicopter from Army Aviation
    Support Facility #1 here on Dec. 14 to assist with the search for two missing hikers
    on Mount Hood…

  • President Obama & Warren Buffett are 7th Cousins – 3 Times Removed

    The following news release was received from Anastasia Tyler at Ancestry.com:

    President Obama

    PROVO, UTAH – Dec. 15, 2009 – Ancestry.com, the world’s largest online resource for family history, confirmed today that President Barack Obama and billionaire financial investor Warren Buffett are more than just political allies — they are actually related. The discovery, made by Ancestry.com family history experts, determined that the men are 7th cousins three times removed, related through a 17th-century Frenchman named Mareen Duvall.

    The No.1 family history Web site revealed that Duvall, who immigrated to Maryland from France in the 1650s, is Pres. Obama’s 9th great-grandfather and Buffett’s 6th great-grandfather. Duvall arrived in America as an indentured servant. By 1659, he had purchased property in Anne Arundel County, Maryland, which he later named “Middle Plantation.” According to historical records, Duvall belonged to a religious sect called the Jacobites, was a planter and merchant and was “conservative in his political life.” And while Obama and Buffett may not share the political views of their great-grandfather, Duvall’s servant-to-landowner life journey may offer clues into the successes of his influential grandsons.

    “We’ve all watched Pres. Obama and Warren Buffett’s ongoing association, from Buffett’s official endorsement of Warren BuffettObama’s 2008 presidential campaign to their sometimes differing views on economic policy,” said Anastasia Tyler, a genealogist at Ancestry.com. “Like most family members, the President and Buffett may not always agree on everything, but this latest discovery confirming they are related may shed light on why the two seem to see eye-to-eye on many issues.”

    The new-found connection between Pres. Obama and Warren Buffett is one of many fascinating discoveries Ancestry.com uncovered within the President’s family tree:

    • German Roots – Earlier this year, Ancestry.com confirmed that Pres. Obama has German roots through his 6th great-grandfather Johann Conrad Wolfley from Besigheim, Wuerttemberg, Germany.
    • Pres. O’Bama? – In 2007, Ancestry.com uncovered the President’s family history connection to Moneygall, Ireland. Pres. Obama’s 3rd great-grandfather Falmouth Kearney left his hometown of Moneygall for the New World, landing in New York harbor in 1850.
    • Celebrity Connection – In 2007, Ancestry.con linked the leader of the Free World to one of Hollywood’s leading men – Brad Pitt. The family history Web site confirmed the two are 9th cousins.

    For anyone interested in discovering who might be a long-lost relative or a famous figure in the family tree, visit www.ancestry.com.

    About Ancestry.com Inc.
    Ancestry.com Inc. is the world’s largest online resource for family history research. The company provides its more than one million subscribers with a digitized collection of over 4 billion records from around the world, along with search and collaboration tools that allow anyone to discover, preserve and share their family history. Ancestry.com users have created more than 12 million family trees containing over 1.25 billion profiles. For more information on Ancestry.com and its other family history resources, visit http://corporate.ancestry.com.

  • Rosenberg: If The Banks Don’t Extend Credit Soon, The Market Is Toast

    chart

    We’re not sure how much stock to put into correlations such as this one — especially since LOTS of charts have this dual-hump pattern over the last several years — but this is still some interesting commentary from Gluskin-Sheff’s David Rosenberg on the connection between monetary velocity and the stock market.

    ————

    Chart 1 maps out the S&P 500 with money velocity (GDP/M1 ratio).  There is a
    90% correlation between the two.  It is one thing to have the Fed pump liquidity
    into the system but it is quite another for the liquidity to be re-leveraged into credit
    and recycled into the economy.   

    The Fed’s easing program is over two years old and the rampant Fed balance
    sheet expansion 15 months old, and still to this day, what the commercial banks
    have done (to Obama’s wrath) with all that liquidity is to keep it as cash on their
    balance sheet to the tune of $1.2 trillion.  We’re not sure why Obama is as rankled
    as he is because the banks are in fact lending out a good chunk of that Fed-
    induced liquidity — right back to Uncle Sam (the banks now own a record $1.3
    trillion of government securities).  

    Back to the chart — there is obviously a close connection between money turnover
    and the stock market.  But we can get periodic divergences as we did in the first
    leg of the rally in 2003.  But the carry-through from 2004 to 2007 hinged critically
    on that multi-year acceleration in money velocity.  If we don’t see the banks begin
    to extend credit in 2010, it is hard to see the 2009 bounce from oversold lows as
    being sustained in the coming year.   

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also:

  • North Face Didn’t Get The Message; Sues South Butt

    Earlier this year, we wrote about how outdoor clothing firm North Face was seriously overreacting in threatening a small parody clothing manufacturer run by an 18-year-old student creating clothing under the “South Butt” brand name. At the time, we were amused by the boy’s lawyer noting:


    “I did try to explain with a great deal of candor to counsel for the North Face that the general public is aware of the difference between a face and a butt.”

    Well, now he may get the chance to explain that in court as well. Despite all of the publicity around those original threats, which resulted in many people trashing North Face for threatening this parody operation, North Face has apparently decided to still move forward with a lawsuit against the kid (thanks Jackie). Apparently, North Face has no sense of humor whatsoever. It’s really amazing that no one at North Face paid much attention to what was being said online about the company even in bringing the threat of a lawsuit. Now that it’s actually filed, the backlash may be an even bigger deal. While it is true that companies need to police misuses of their trademark, this was an opportunity for North Face to act cool about it (and, hell, why not just grant the kid a license). It would have made them look cool. Instead, they look like big corporate bullies, beating up on a kid who was having fun selling a parody line of clothing.

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • Jeff Koons’ Puppy

    Bilbao, Spain | Extraordinary Flora

    American artist Jeff Koons, famous for his large scale cartoony sculptures, was commissioned to create a piece to be displayed at Bad Arolsen in Germany in 1992.

    The resulting creation was named “Puppy,” a 43-foot-tall living plant sculpture of a West Highland terrier. Koons utilized computer modeling to construct his outlandish version of topiary sculptures common to eighteenth-century formal gardens. Koons created the piece to inspire optimism and to instill, in his own words, “confidence and security.”

    In a powerful example of how life doesn’t imitate art, as Puppy facilitated a potentially disastrous security breach at the Guggenheim Bilbao. A few days before its inauguration in 1997, the museum was nearly bombed by three ETA Basque separatists posing as gardeners working on the sculpture. In addition to their incognito dress, the men carried flower pots like those on Puppy filled with 12 remote-controlled grenades. A firestorm and pursuit ensued, claiming the life of policeman Jose María Aguirre, though their plot was ultimately foiled. The plaza in which Puppy currently resides has been renamed in honor of Aguirre.

    After traveling the globe at exhibitions in Germany, Australia, and the United States, Puppy found its final home in Spain. While the original Puppy topiary sculpture is a part of the Guggenheim Bilbao’s permanent collection, media mogul Peter Brant and his wife, model Stephanie Seymour, commissioned Koons to construct a second, duplicate Puppy for their Connecticut estate.

    The combination of its size and imposing reputation in the art world, as well as the live bedding flowers covering Puppy, the sculpture’s legend literally and figuratively continues to grow by the day.

  • Search



    Share/Bookmark

  • Gartman: Greece’s Prime Minister Doesn’t Realize How Much Trouble He’s In

    greece red card

    In this morning’s Gartman Letter, analyst Dennis Gartman addresses the ongoing fiscal crisis that revolves around Greece:

    The Gartman Letter: Moving to Europe, Greece is in trouble and the speech made yesterday by the rather overtly leftward leaning Prime Minister, Mr. Papandreou, was disconcerting to say the very least. At every turn, when the Prime Minister might have drifted toward the economic centre, he drifted farther and farther to the Left instead. Where Ireland seems intent upon dealing properly with its budgetary problems by cutting spending materially and raising taxes marginally, Greece instead is cutting spending hardly at all and is raising taxes almost solely upon the nation’s wealthy to confiscatory levels. This really is utter economic nonsense.

    Speaking to the Parliament, Mr.Papandreou … whose family has literally “run” Greece as a fiefdom any number of times in the past…said that there shall be resistance to what he has called “tough and painful measures” to restore Greece’ position within the EU but he insisted the country’s international credibility depended on it. He said, unleashing a tirade of leftward leaning ideas,

    There is pressure from our European partners, which is an opportunity for us to tackle problems that have been festering for decades…We are a government of reform, not a government that manages the status quo…We need to take tough and painful decisions, which will face opposition, but we will bring meritocracy and restore credibility.

    The problem is that most of his program resolves around raising taxes on Greek wealth and Greek entrepreneurs. His program will play well to the public; it will play havoc with the Greek economy however {Ed. Note: Prime Minister Papandreou is the President of the Socialist International, and has been since ’06. His father was Prime Minister as was his grandfather, and they too were ranking members of the Socialist International for many years.

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also:

  • Lower Health Care Costs Discovered In Small Town Oklahoma

    Table

    A health care experiment in Duncan, Oklahoma shows how small changes to behavior can elicit large cost savings when it comes to health care.

    MedEncentive has been developing a web-based cost containment program that claims to have already achieved substantial results.

    What's most interesting about this program is that it doesn't force anyone to do anything.

    Health Care Blog: There the City of Duncan has put its employees (and their providers) into a system that incents (but doesn’t mandate) physicians to practice according to accepted guidelines, and incents (but doesn’t mandate) patients to read information prescribed by their physicians about their treatments (and tests them about it). The system then asks each party to rate the other.

    It sounds simple and frankly, compared to much in health care, it is. The system is supplied by MedEncentive, an Oklahoma City firm led by the charming and engaging Jeff Greene. While I remain fascinated by MedEncentive’s program (and FD MedEncentive has sponsored the Health 2.0 Conference in the past), it’s perhaps grown a little more slowly than Jeff and other fans might have liked—given the scope of the problem.

    But the results have been impressive in reducing costs (mostly by reducing hospitalizations) and increasing patient involvement. Yesterday MedEncentive released a five year retrospective. The key finding?:

    City of Duncan costs for the most recent year was 8.6% less than five years ago prior to implementing the Program, which is 34.9% less than the projected costs. The resultant four year savings equates to an 8:1 return on investment. (emphasis added)

    Read more at Health Care Blog.

    Check out how this cost containment program works via MedEncentive's report here.

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also: