Follow Me

Subscribe via E-mail

Your email:

Caveat Emptor

We want you to hear directly from our research analysts.  We want you to read their perspectives.  We want you to experience the humor and experiences of their lives.  Therefore, our blog entries represent their views, perspectives and opinions.  These may or may not be consistent with the opinions of the management of Global Patent Solutions.    We deal only in facts when producing research reports.  But this Blog is a place for opinion and viewpoints.  We'd love to hear your opinion.  We, too, realize that you may not be speaking on behalf of your whole company, either, when you share your thoughts.  We want to hear them anyway.  We value YOUR opinion. Please share it with us here.

Global Patent Solutions Blog

Current Articles | RSS Feed RSS Feed

Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon (the inventor)

  
  
  
  
  
  

As we all may have noticed at some point there is a list of references cited adorning the face of every US patent.  Utilizing these lists of references, patents can be connected to other patents through the references cited on their own face, as well as the instances where the patent is cited on a subsequent patent’s face.   By connecting patents in this manner a network begins to form and begs the question: How many steps would it take to connect any patent with any other patent? 

 LostdegreesofKevinBacon resized 600

With a question like that naturally the mind shifts to the man, the myth, the legend Mr. Kevin Bacon, who allegedly can be connected to anyone in Hollywood through 6 steps or less.  So, starting with any patent where would we find ourselves after 6 steps through the references cited network? In honor of the hard working star that paved the way for school dances in conservative small towns everywhere, we begin with a patent attributed to an inventor named Kevin A. Bacon.

 

Start: US 7,797,934 B2, Kevin A. Bacon’s patent for an anti-stall, hydraulic control system for construction equipment

 

First Degree: US 6,305,419 B1, a system for regulating pilot pressure to a control valve

 

Second Degree: US 7,828,527 B2, a system for circulating paint

 

Third Degree: US 6,976,072 B2, a queue manager for monitoring the status of a server queue in a network server and the status of a device queue in a peripheral device at the same time

 

Fourth Degree: US 5,923,826 A, a copier/print with a digital reproduction system communicating with a remote document processing station by way of a print server

 

Fifth Degree: US 7,164,492 B2, a facsimile device with an algorithm for automatically resizing an input document before being transmitted

 

Sixth Degree: US 6,208,427 B1, a Personal Digital Assistant (PDA) printer and printing method

 

So there you have it, in 6 steps you can connect Kevin A. Bacon’s hydraulic control system for construction equipment to a PDA printer.  While this journey represents one connection path for the Kevin Bacon patent, feel free to follow your own path of patent connection intrigue and share it in the comments section below. Have a suggestion for an inventor or invention you would like to see in the Six Degrees post? Share that in the comments too!

- J. K.

Comments

There are no comments on this article.
Comments have been closed for this article.

Six Degrees Blog Series

As we all may have noticed at some point there is a list of references cited adorning the face of every US patent.  Utilizing these lists of references, patents can be connected to other patents through the references cited on their own face, as well as the instances where the patent is cited on a subsequent patent’s face.   By connecting patents in this manner a network begins to form and begs the question: How many steps would it take to connect any patent with any other patent? 

So, starting with any patent where would we find ourselves after 6 steps through the references cited network?

We're sharing our path, but feel free to follow your own path of patent connection intrigue and share it in the comments section below.

Have a suggestion for an inventor or invention you would like to see in the Six Degrees post? Share that in the comments too!

Six Degrees of Christie Brinkley

Six Degrees of the Floppy Disk

Six Degrees of Steve Wozniak

Six Degrees of Astroturf

Six Degrees of the Calculator Wristwatch

 

Six Degrees of Eddie Van Halen

Six Degrees of the Roomba - Patent on a Rotten Tomato of an Idea?

Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon (the inventor)

Six Degrees of the iPhone

Six Degrees of Michael Jackson - Patent on the Moonwalk?

Computer Mouse Patent -- A Bozo of an Idea?

Six Degrees of Walt Disney

6 Degrees of the Microwave - Patents on Heart Stoppers and Starters

Six Degrees of Les Paul -- Patents on Electric Guitars & Baby-Rockers

Patent Search: 6 Degrees of the Post-It Note

Six Degrees: Patents from Head to Toe...er... From Toe to Head

 

Blogs on Blogs