By Seb Janacek, 28 October 2008 15:48
Perhaps more than any tech company, Apple continues to surprise and delight with its innovative products.
The concepts behind many of these are patented - so to get a glimpse into the inner workings of the Apple design team, silicon.com has rounded up and rated 10 of the most interesting and absurd patent applications submitted by Apple in recent years.
Many of these ideas will never see the light of day but they all either amuse or hint at what could be.
Clamshell iPhone
An intriguing design for an alternative iPhone, the flip device is essentially a clamshell handset with two touchscreens - one of them transparent. The patent uses the phrase "dual-sided trackpad" to describe the technology for the device. Basically, the lower half of the handset is transparent and can be folded shut over the top half, which represents the as-is iPhone display. The transparent half can be used as a touch control whether it's folded up or not.
Looking at the diagrams, the lower half is dedicated to input and the top half is given over to the display. Chances are this is one for the bin, as Steve Jobs has complained about devices which dedicate half of their physical 'real estate' to input, whether the function in focus needs it or not.
Verdict: 2/10
Sounds a bit complicated and pointless.
Credit: US Patent and Trademark Office
Think we've missed one? Let us know by posting a comment below




Comments
There are 2 comments. Join the discussion
1. Mark Walton
Of all the things I thought I'd never see on silicon, a Turducken reference has be up there...nice one :-)
2. Michael Gilligan
The old ACT Apricot Mouse/Trackball [many years ago] used a neat approach ... This had a gentle magnetic detent on the vertical encoder, so the cursor moved "stepwise".
... Might be worth another look.