Friday, December 21
Patenting the alphabet:
SANTA CLARA, Calif. (Reuters) - Palm Inc. (news/quote) (PALM.O), the No. 1
handheld computer maker, on Friday said it would appeal a court ruling in
favor of Xerox Corp. (news/quote) (XRX.N) in a case over a patent for
handwriting recognition software.
``We assert that the Graffiti handwriting technology does not infringe the
Xerox patent and that Palm has strong arguments to support its defense,''
Eric Benhamou, Palm's chairman and chief executive said in a statement.
Xerox said on Thursday that it had won a patent infringement suit against
3Com Corp. (news/quote) (COMS.O) and Palm over the Graffiti product.
Xerox had sued U.S. Robotics, which was later acquired by 3Com, in April
1997, claiming that the handwriting recognition technology marketed as
Graffiti and used on Palm handheld devices infringed a patent Xerox
received in 1997.
Xerox said the technology was invented at its Palo Alto Research Center,
known as PARC.
``Palm will defend itself vigorously and does not intend for this
litigation to affect its business strategy or business model nor that of
its licensees,'' the Palm statement said.
SANTA CLARA, Calif. (Reuters) - Palm Inc. (news/quote) (PALM.O), the No. 1
handheld computer maker, on Friday said it would appeal a court ruling in
favor of Xerox Corp. (news/quote) (XRX.N) in a case over a patent for
handwriting recognition software.
``We assert that the Graffiti handwriting technology does not infringe the
Xerox patent and that Palm has strong arguments to support its defense,''
Eric Benhamou, Palm's chairman and chief executive said in a statement.
Xerox said on Thursday that it had won a patent infringement suit against
3Com Corp. (news/quote) (COMS.O) and Palm over the Graffiti product.
Xerox had sued U.S. Robotics, which was later acquired by 3Com, in April
1997, claiming that the handwriting recognition technology marketed as
Graffiti and used on Palm handheld devices infringed a patent Xerox
received in 1997.
Xerox said the technology was invented at its Palo Alto Research Center,
known as PARC.
``Palm will defend itself vigorously and does not intend for this
litigation to affect its business strategy or business model nor that of
its licensees,'' the Palm statement said.