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The USPTO Exhibits the Life and Patents of Steve Jobs

  
  
  
  
  
  

jobs 1980sIn November of 2011, the USPTO opened an exhibit showcasing The Patents and Trademarks of Steve Jobs: Art and Technology that Changed the World.  Free to the public, the commemorative display will continue to reside in the atrium of the Madison Building until February 25th

If you happen to visit the site of the exhibit, you’ll find a display of over 300 patents that list the infamous Steve Jobs among the group of inventors, from the iPod and other related gadgets to the glass staircases found in many of the Apple stores.  Kappos states that “his patents and trademarks provide a striking example of the importance intellectual property plays in the global marketplace.”   The patents and trademarks that Jobs helped to create are what gave the Apple company its popular and recognizable identity.    

Steve Jobs and his partner, Steve Wozniak, first launched Apple Computer Inc. in January of 1977.  For the next two decades, Apple manufactured personal computers, releasing a continuum of new models like Apple II and Macintosh.  However, the company really took off when Jobs, after a brief disappearance, returned in 1996 to become the company’s CEO. 

In 2001, with the incredibly successful release of the iPod, Apple dropped the Computer from its name, and continued on as a leader in the consumer electronics industry.  Jobs’ simple and streamlined product philosophy is no doubt responsible for the company’s remarkable success.  As of 2011, Apple is considered the largest technology firm in the world with over $60 billion in annual revenue. 

The exhibit, created by Invent Now, Inc., offers a glimpse into the innovative business life of Steve Jobs.  If you happen to find yourself in the vicinity of Alexandria, VA you should stop in and marvel at the free display.  While you’re there, you may also have an interest in visiting the National Inventors Hall of Fame and Museum. 

 

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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