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Science Forum Index » Engineering - Lighting Forum » Color Kinetics and the RGB patent
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| CC |
Posted: Sun Mar 11, 2007 12:33 pm |
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| Clive Mitchell |
Posted: Sun Mar 11, 2007 12:52 pm |
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In message <et1eh708g2@news5.newsguy.com>, CC
<crobc@BOGUS.sbcglobal.net> writes
Quote: First of all, the present state of patent affairs (at least in the US)
makes me sick. There is nothing novel or unobvious to those in or out
of the field about using a combination of RGB LEDs to create shades of
color, as I am not a lighting expert and the idea occured to me many
times before I discovered that it is patented.
Yeah, it's a shit situation, but fortunately is only having a negative
impact on America's lighting industry. Patent systems in other parts of
the world work properly.
Quote:
I have also concluded that the color rendition by purely a combination
of red, green, and blue LEDs is rotten, and so I am planning to
construct lights for my own use based on a full spectrum of LED colors.
Ie, red, orange, yellow, green, aqua, blue, and violet.
It's already been explored. There are lights that use supplementary
colours for smoother pallets.
--
Clive Mitchell
http://www.bigclive.com |
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| Adam Aglionby |
Posted: Tue Mar 13, 2007 7:17 pm |
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On 11 Mar, 17:52, Clive Mitchell <bigcli...@ntlworld.com> wrote:
Quote: In message <et1eh70...@news5.newsguy.com>, CC
c...@BOGUS.sbcglobal.net> writes>First of all, the present state of patent affairs (at least in the US)
makes me sick. There is nothing novel or unobvious to those in or out
of the field about using a combination of RGB LEDs to create shades of
color, as I am not a lighting expert and the idea occured to me many
times before I discovered that it is patented.
CK patent covers mixing of 2 colours or more.
Quote: Yeah, it's a shit situation, but fortunately is only having a negative
impact on America's lighting industry. Patent systems in other parts of
the world work properly.
Its having a not positive effect on medicine research as I understand
it, companies rushing to patent gene sequences that are pretty much as
prior art as you can get, but in a medicine may be a novel use which
is patentable.
Think US lighting industry sprouting Canadian offshoots to handle the
LED research. In meantime rest of us continue to enjoy rapid
development and falling prices.
Quote:
I have also concluded that the color rendition by purely a combination
of red, green, and blue LEDs is rotten, and so I am planning to
construct lights for my own use based on a full spectrum of LED colors.
Ie, red, orange, yellow, green, aqua, blue, and violet.
It's already been explored. There are lights that use supplementary
colours for smoother pallets.
Its having software to make cololur selection a bit more intuitive, 7
faders isn`t it:
http://www.selador.net
Adam
p.s. looking for photie before Clive blackmails me with the one before
the hair transplant.
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| Paul Hovnanian P.E. |
Posted: Tue Mar 13, 2007 10:37 pm |
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Adam Aglionby wrote:
Quote:
On 11 Mar, 17:52, Clive Mitchell <bigcli...@ntlworld.com> wrote:
In message <et1eh70...@news5.newsguy.com>, CC
c...@BOGUS.sbcglobal.net> writes>First of all, the present state of patent affairs (at least in the US)
makes me sick. There is nothing novel or unobvious to those in or out
of the field about using a combination of RGB LEDs to create shades of
color, as I am not a lighting expert and the idea occured to me many
times before I discovered that it is patented.
CK patent covers mixing of 2 colours or more.
Yeah, it's a shit situation, but fortunately is only having a negative
impact on America's lighting industry. Patent systems in other parts of
the world work properly.
Its having a not positive effect on medicine research as I understand
it, companies rushing to patent gene sequences that are pretty much as
prior art as you can get, but in a medicine may be a novel use which
is patentable.
Think US lighting industry sprouting Canadian offshoots to handle the
LED research. In meantime rest of us continue to enjoy rapid
development and falling prices.
I don't think that will help. IIRC, legitimate research is exempt from
patent restrictions. On the other hand, if you want to sell into the US
market, you will need to address licensing issues.
--
Paul Hovnanian mailto:Paul@Hovnanian.com
------------------------------------------------------------------
Applying information technology is simply finding the right wrench
to pound in the correct screw. |
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| Clive Mitchell |
Posted: Tue Mar 13, 2007 10:54 pm |
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In message <1173831421.103478.129280@l77g2000hsb.googlegroups.com>, Adam
Aglionby <ledlight@gmail.com> writes
Quote: p.s. looking for photie before Clive blackmails me with the one before
the hair transplant.
It's worse than that. The whole picture shows you stroking a hot pussy.
--
Clive Mitchell
http://www.bigclive.com |
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| Adam Aglionby |
Posted: Wed Mar 14, 2007 6:39 am |
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On 14 Mar, 03:37, "Paul Hovnanian P.E." <p...@hovnanian.com> wrote:
Quote: Adam Aglionby wrote:
On 11 Mar, 17:52, Clive Mitchell <bigcli...@ntlworld.com> wrote:
In message <et1eh70...@news5.newsguy.com>, CC
c...@BOGUS.sbcglobal.net> writes>First of all, the present state of patent affairs (at least in the US)
makes me sick. There is nothing novel or unobvious to those in or out
of the field about using a combination of RGB LEDs to create shades of
color, as I am not a lighting expert and the idea occured to me many
times before I discovered that it is patented.
CK patent covers mixing of 2 colours or more.
Yeah, it's a shit situation, but fortunately is only having a negative
impact on America's lighting industry. Patent systems in other parts of
the world work properly.
Its having a not positive effect on medicine research as I understand
it, companies rushing to patent gene sequences that are pretty much as
prior art as you can get, but in a medicine may be a novel use which
is patentable.
Think US lighting industry sprouting Canadian offshoots to handle the
LED research. In meantime rest of us continue to enjoy rapid
development and falling prices.
I don't think that will help. IIRC, legitimate research is exempt from
patent restrictions. On the other hand, if you want to sell into the US
market, you will need to address licensing issues.
--
Paul Hovnanian mailto:P...@Hovnanian.com
------------------------------------------------------------------
Applying information technology is simply finding the right wrench
to pound in the correct screw.
Was half joking, Canadian company Saco do a lot of LED design for
other companies and TIR ,also Canadian, continue to fight CK`s
patents, interestingly TIR used to be a CK partner.
Less than bothered about US market TBH. Development and range of LED
product is faster , wider and more exciting outside.
Adam |
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| Adam Aglionby |
Posted: Wed Mar 14, 2007 6:41 am |
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On 14 Mar, 03:54, Clive Mitchell <bigcli...@ntlworld.com> wrote:
Quote: In message <1173831421.103478.129...@l77g2000hsb.googlegroups.com>, Adam
Aglionby <ledli...@gmail.com> writes
p.s. looking for photie before Clive blackmails me with the one before
the hair transplant.
It's worse than that. The whole picture shows you stroking a hot pussy.
--
Clive Mitchellhttp://www.bigclive.com
It was a sunny dat ;-)
Adam |
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