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VCSY - A Laughing Place #2
Sunday, 6 May 2007
We got our very own troll. Ain't he cute? Original, too.
Mood:  suave
Now Playing: 'Taking Down the Tumblers' Hole in the wall bar closes up shop and sells off glasses to avoid a spectacle. (Contact Sports)
Topic: Calamity

You know what they say. The opinion about lawyers is they're really good or really bad depending on which end of the lawyer YOU happen to find yourself.

Meet the Original Patent Troll

Attorney and 26-lawyer firm sue first, settle fast and collect big. But can that last, in the face of imitators and enemies?

     
Patent attorney Raymond Niro Sr.

THE Patent Troll 

Raymond Niro rarely looks for clients anymore. Instead, the charming, Chicago-based litigator hunts for patents. This unconventional strategy has made him rich and, in some circles anyway, infamous.

The Niro (rhymes with Cairo) technique works like this: In early 2001, he learned that Schneider Automation, Inc., was selling a patent covering the use of spreadsheet programs in manufacturing equipment. The North Andover, Mass.-based company invited hundreds of companies to bid on the patent. No one was interested -- except for Niro.

Niro suspected that Schneider's patent could be his next golden ticket, but he was worried that suing over a patent he owned was unethical. So he kept his wallet closed and opened his Rolodex, calling up former clients to tell them about the patent and offering his legal representation on contingency. His pitch piqued the interest of Daniel Henderson. In the late 1990s, Henderson and Niro sued over 40 companies for infringing patents on early answering machine technology, which Henderson purchased from a Japanese inventor. The litigation brought in $65 million in licensing fees from corporate giants like AT&T, IBM, Sony and Dell.

In March 2001, Henderson "won" Schneider's patent auction -- he was the only bidder -- under the name Solaia Technology LLC, a company formed to hold the patents. Niro's 26-partner law firm, Niro, Scavone, Haller and Niro, took on Solaia's legal work in exchange for a percentage of the licensing profits. A few months later, Niro sent hundreds of nearly identical letters to allegedly infringing companies offering to "amicably and promptly resolve all issues" for a payment of $600,000 to $1 million.

"While litigation can result in enormous recoveries after trial, as it has for many of our clients, the costs and burdens involved to both sides in many lawsuits are considerable," wrote Niro.

When the letters didn't get an immediate response, Niro sued 50 companies for patent infringement. Most of the defendants, major companies like Boeing, Clorox and BMW, settled immediately. Solaia took in about $30 million in fees, and Niro's firm got about 30 percent, roughly $10 million.

This is how Raymond Niro rolls. Niro's spent a good portion of his career representing small patent holders like Solaia on contingency -- making millions and igniting a firestorm of controversy. Niro's firm filed 37 patent cases for plaintiff patent holders in 2005, the most of the more than 200 firms surveyed by IP Law & Business. The number was high enough to land Niro Scavone in fifth place on the overall list of firms, tying with such powerhouses as Kirkland & Ellis and Howrey.

Niro's former partner Gerald Hosier found fame and fortune turning Jerome Lemelson's patents on bar code technology into a billion-dollar licensing business. But Niro taught the patent world a more enduring lesson: Lemelson isn't unique. Like an irritating mosquito that GCs can't squash, Hosier's licensing approach could be applied over and over again, on different patents across different industries for huge profits. Niro has extracted royalties on everything from patents covering hemodialysis catheters to wireless technology used to locate items of interest in online maps. In the process, he's made some serious royalties of his own: a Falcon 10 jet, six Ferraris, acres of land in Chicago, Boca Raton and Aspen, and a $250,000 gift to DePaul University endowing the Raymond P. Niro professorship in intellectual property law.

Niro also holds the dubious distinction of being the first patent troll. In 2001 Intel Corporation assistant general counsel Peter Detkin coined the term to characterize Niro and his client TechSearch LLC when Intel was defending a patent suit against them. "Troll was a derivative of, er, me," says Niro. "I'm the first." He's hardly the last: Niro and his millions have inspired waves of impersonators.

Imitation may be the sincerest form of flattery, but it has complicated Niro's business model. Over the past decade, some corporations have grown tired of paying licensing fees to patent holders without products. They've started lobbying Congress to change the patent laws. The issue has become so hotly debated that in May the U.S. Supreme Court weighed in, finding that MercExchange LLC, a patent-holding company, wasn't automatically entitled to an injunction against eBay Inc. -- even though the online auctioneer was found to be infringing MercExchange's patent.

Companies have also started fighting back in court, occasionally funding expensive and vicious legal battles against Niro's clients and other patent-holding companies.

That's what happened in the Solaia case. For Rockwell Automation Inc., a competitor of Schneider, Niro's Solaia letters were a call to arms. Rockwell had been invited to bid in Schneider's auction, but the company declined, believing that the patents covered outdated technology. The company was incensed at the idea of paying Solaia for a "worthless" patent. Worse, Solaia had also sued Rockwell's customers. "We weren't going to roll over and let our customers be subject to the attacks," says Rockwell's IP counsel John Miller. "We wanted to get a public victory in this matter and show that this claim had no merit whatsoever."

On January 21, 2003, Rockwell sued Schneider, Solaia, and Niro Scavone, alleging that by conspiring to hurt Rockwell, the defendants engaged in unfair competition in violation of antitrust laws. In its complaint, Rockwell claimed that Niro masterminded Schneider's auction. Two months after Solaia "won" the fake auction, says the complaint, Niro and Henderson legally formed Solaia as a platform to issue "baseless" patent litigation against Rockwell's customers.

Niro hit back, accusing not just Rockwell but also its then chief IP counsel James O'Shaughnessy and its law firms, Fish & Richardson and Howrey of monopslizing -- creating a buyer's side monopoly to prevent Solaia from licensing its patents. The case turned vicious; in court filings, Niro alleged that O'Shaughnessy threatened Solaia in a meeting with Howrey, saying, "It's not personal, it's only business," a line famously uttered by Michael Corleone in "The Godfather."

A Wisconsin district court later dismissed Niro's charges against the law firms and O'Shaughnessy, but the infringement claims continued, stretching the docket sheet to nearly 700 papers. By mid-2006, a series of unfavorable decisions on the merits of the patent forced Niro to drop his claims. Still, Rockwell's victory rang a bit hollow. Solaia's patent was dead, but Henderson and Niro had already collected their paychecks.

The Solaia litigation is over, but the allegation that Niro Scavone invests in its clients lingers. (Intel made a similar charge in the TechSearch case.) Niro flatly and quickly denies that he owns any part of any patents. "It's a rumor that has been generated by our adversaries to discredit Ray," says Anthony Brown, former president of TechSearch, now part of Acacia Research Corporation, "It's not true; it never has been."

But there's no doubt that Niro Scavone is at the center of a patent ecosystem, connecting patent-holding companies, lawyers and inventors, and making serious profits. Longtime client J. Carl Cooper came to Niro's firm through such an arrangement. When Hewlett-Packard filed a declaratory judgment action to invalidate one of the Nevada-based inventor's patents on image resolution enhancement, TechSearch's Brown recommended that he call Niro. Says Cooper: "We ended up with a nice business arrangement where [Brown] made a substantial investment in us, and Ray [Niro] took over the defense in the HP case." HP settled, and Niro went on to assert Cooper's patents against Dell, Sony, LG Electronics, Thomson Financial and many others, netting over $50 million. Cooper used the money to invest in his five-person business, which now, he says, does a lot of lucrative licensing, almost entirely represented by Niro.

A recent sanction from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit also hangs over the firm's head. In March 2005, the Federal Circuit slammed Niro Scavone lawyers Patrick Solon and Thomas Scavone for their conduct representing Schreiber Foods, Inc., in a patent trial over cheese-processing patents. Niro Scavone had won a $26 million verdict in that case. During the litigation, Schreiber Foods, transferred its patent into a tax shelter, called Schreiber Technologies, Inc., without alerting the court to the change. According to the Federal Circuit's opinion, Solon and Scavone committed "serious misconduct" by concealing evidence of the transfer from the court. The appeals court reversed Schreiber's trial win, and Niro Scavone waived its claim to the damages -- not a hard sacrifice, considering that the case made the firm $30 million in licensing fees. "We made a strategic decision that turned out to be wrong," says Niro, "[The technology has] been licensed and ultimately been successful."

Sitting in his 46th-floor corner office overlooking Lake Michigan, Niro explains why he doesn't fear the anti-troll crusade. The stocky, 6-foot-2-inch lawyer grabs a statue of a troll lying on its back rolling with laughter, displaying it on his huge palm. "There are people out there who say, 'They are terrible people, they are trolls,'" he says. "There isn't one of them -- or at least not a lot of them -- that have ever had the thrill of doing something for a person, a real person, that changed their lives."

For small inventors, Niro is a guardian angel. Inventor Frank Calabrese turned to Niro after he discovered that Square D Company, a $7 billion division of the French conglomerate Schneider Electric SA, was using his data relay system in large manufacturing machines. By the time the case went to trial, the 58-year-old Calabrese was dying of colon cancer and was too sick to take Niro's jet to Chicago for the hearing. Calabrese's last wish, says his wife, Kathy, was to get credit and compensation for his work. Niro made that happen, winning Calabrese $13.2 million (later increased to $20 million by the judge) in January 2000. Two weeks after the jury verdict, Calabrese died. "Every time I do something I think, 'Well, I'm living our dream, Frank,'" says Kathy. "I will always be grateful to Ray Niro and his firm."

Niro wasn't always on the side of the little guy. In 1969, after graduating The George Washington University Law School, he joined Hume, Clement, Hume & Lee (which later became IP law firm Brinks Hofer Gilson & Lione) and soon became a partner representing large corporations in patent cases. Then Niro's life took its fateful turn: He befriended Hume Clement partner Gerald Hosier.

At Brinks Hofer, Hosier and Niro made $50,000 a year. On their own, they estimated, they could triple that. At the time it seemed like a fortune to Niro, the son of a bricklayer who immigrated from Italy. "If someone would guarantee me [a salary of $150,000] adjusted for inflation for the rest my life, I'd take it," Hosier remembers telling Niro in 1976. "Thank God no one was there to take me up on the offer," says Hosier.

In 1976 Niro and Hosier left Brinks Hofer to start their own firm. They rented a small office on a cheap part of LaSalle Street in Chicago for $600 a month. It was a family affair: Hosier's dad managed the firm's finances, and Niro's elementary-school-aged children played paralegal, running off photocopies and organizing documents. At first, their fledgling firm focused on hourly work, mostly for two clients they'd brought from Brinks Hofer -- B & J Manufacturing and United Shoe Machinery Corp. The first contingency case came within the year: Niro and Hosier represented inventor George Richards in a patent case against EmCo, Ltd., winning $200,000 in damages -- half went to the firm ($50,000 for each lawyer) and half to Richards. Their success convinced Thomas Scavone, another Brinks Hofer lawyer, to jump ship.

By 1983, 20 percent of the firm's work was on contingency. Hosier wanted to do these cases full time. Niro, however, was recovering from a heart attack and feared the risk inherent in a full-on contingency model. So the two fathers of patent contingency litigation split up.

A series of contingency cases in the mid-1990s grew the firm, as Niro brought in more lawyers to handle the increased workload. In 1996 Niro's firm won four patent cases: $48.7 million for a soy-based ink invented by Iowa school teacher Sharon Brower, $5.9 million in two cases for longtime client Black & Decker's SnakeLight flashlight and $2.3 million for a spinal correction device by orthopedic surgeon Dr. David Spencer. Niro Scavone kept up the wins the following year, picking up the (later overturned) $26.2 million Schreiber Foods verdict and, a few months later, $57 million for Injection Research Specialists Inc., in a Colorado trade secrets case over an electronic fuel injection system for snowmobiles. Winnings from those two years alone topped $140 million.

Since that hot streak in the 1990s, however, Niro's wins have grown smaller. Of the recent damage awards, none top $20 million. But as Niro says: "It's not who you are -- it's who people think you are." Niro's reputation as an aggressive litigator brings in the settlements. He happily shows off the statues of the Looney Toons character Yosemite Sam in his office, given to him by his sons for being "quick on the trigger." As Niro's wife explains: "He just takes those guns out of his holster and fires in any direction, then he puts them back and thinks, 'Well, maybe that wasn't such a good idea.' "

That itchy trigger finger typically hits its target: Most trial-shy GCs will settle to avoid litigation. "Ray's business is to settle cases," says Kirkland & Ellis' David Callahan, who represented Hershey and International Paper, two settling parties in the Solaia case. "The primary driver [in settling] was comparing the cost of settlement for what it would cost to litigate successfully."

The cost equation works both ways: A trial costs Niro more than writing a threatening letter; the risk is higher too. And with hundreds of letters, a few hundred-thousand-dollar settlements quickly become millions. In 2000 Niro represented IMS Technology Inc. on behalf of a patent over interactive machine tool control. By the time the jury awarded $8.9 million in damages, other companies had paid out $50 million in settlements. In the TechSearch case, Niro picked up a few million before losing to Intel at the Federal Circuit.

On average, it costs Niro $1 million to put on a case. He doesn't pay expenses, leaving inventors to find other sources, like patent-holding companies or private equity shops to front those costs -- usually about $2.5 million -- in exchange for a cut of the profits. He makes the money either as a straight 30-40 percent of damages, licensing fees and royalties, or a graduated arrangement, where as the firm progresses through the litigation, it gets a bigger cut. For example, for pretrial settlement Niro gets 20 percent; for a verdict at trial, 30 percent; for an appeal, 40 percent. Niro also does contingency work for a few corporations, which pay an up-front fee and a small percentage of the postsettlement riches. Contingency cases produce about 95 percent of the firm's roughly $100 million annual revenue. Niro charges his small number of hourly clients, including Alcatel, AccuMed Inc., Illinois Tool Works Inc. and Black & Decker, an hourly rate of $840.

Love him or hate him, Niro's methods have become ingrained in the patent world. Over the 10 years, more firms have gotten into the IP contingency market, including some bold-faced names like Fish & Richardson and Fulbright & Jaworski. NTP Incorporated, the plaintiff in the highly publicized BlackBerry case, was represented on contingency by Wiley Rein & Fielding (a great decision, considering the firm's $612.5 million payday). The market can't sustain everyone, says Ronald Schutz, a partner at Robins, Kaplan, Miller & Ciresi, which started doing IP contingency cases in the mid-1990s and has picked up some former Niro clients. With 250 lawyers, Robins Kaplan's size gives it an advantage: "We can have more cases in the pipeline to finance the litigation," says Schutz.

The contingency gospel is also taking hold among Texas personal injury lawyers inspired by multimillion-dollar patent damage awards. According to Niro, plaintiffs lawyers have been making the pilgrimage to visit him, hoping to learn from the master. Unlike the big firms, those lawyers offer some real competition, says Niro. Both Niro and Hosier say that big law firms can't work efficiently enough to become serious players in the contingency business. But the personal injury lawyers know how to conduct effective contingency cases. Plus, they'll take big loans to advance expenses. "We've lost some cases that we've really wanted to take because of the willingness of other people to pay all the expenses," says Niro. And that kind of stuff, he says, is really shady business.

end article

See also:

http://vcsy.blogspot.com/2007/05/from-niro-scavone-haller-niroon-patent.html 


Posted by Portuno Diamo at 9:31 PM EDT
Updated: Sunday, 6 May 2007 9:53 PM EDT
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When Willy comes marchingk home again.
Mood:  smelly
Now Playing: 'Svimmingk Und Der Shtinkenpoopenpipen' Escape by mudbugging through sewer pipes. (War/Sport)
Topic: The Sneaky Runarounds

The following notes are my opining on the following article. My notes are [bracketed in the funky font and yellow]. Bolds are mine.

Better read the Excerpts and DISCLAIMER before proceeding or you'll wet your bibbies.

Useful: Der TIMELINE vershtinken mit dem appleboosterfitzen

October 17, 2006

Yahoo! Announced Panama Launch : See My Notes About Panama Directly From Yahoo! Search Marketing's Headquarters

Excerpted 

Zod explained that this is a new system that was built out as an Internet system. It is very modular, very expandable. Only a small piece of it, all the way in the backend is from the Overture.
[So we know this isn't Overture technology but I DO wonder what just that 'small piece' from Overture stuffed all the way in the back end is.] Zod explains why Panama took so long to develop. Yahoo bought Overture in 2003. They first had to get their arms around this large system and it was growing like a weed. They learned that the existing system won't take them where they need to go. So they had to start from scratch. [Hmmm... sounds eerily like the 'Longhorn rewrite of 2004'.] They couldn't use the existing team because they were maintaining Overture. They deployed a new team to build out the new Panama. That took a while. [But it was all done by July 18, 2006 code complete when deployment was delayed.] I quoted http://blog.searchenginewatch.com/blog/061011-094042 and they denied the sucking them up drive quote from the NY Times. [See Footnote 1] 10% of his dev team is on Panama, so it is not the case. Brian adds that the integration is key, putting together several pieces and optimize that. Take in huge amount of advertisers, ad types and bring in all of Yahoo products and integrate them [gee.... sounds like SiteFlash to me.]. Brain said they are in a good position, and the key is putting in place a system, and org structure to make them work [thus 'we need a human organization and workflow' meaning this is something organic in Yahoo or they would have already had this in place. Would that we could take a look at the skillsets of folks perhaps laid off or reassigned via the Panama delay.]. With Panama it is about the platform. And they can truly sit down and they is one Yahoo [They sho is, boss. Want me to bring the car around? Want us po' boys and po' womens want to invent something else so y'alls can steal it? Hyuk hyuk hyuk. Yassa, Massa Bill done give us a real cobbin' and you all's done gave us alls some woik. Mighty obliged.]. Zed added that they have a test discipline. Testing concepts, etc [sounds to me like governance coupled with perhaps an idealized simulation regime or continuous activity audit (why not both? - the distributive nature will allow for scale in speed)], gives them a huge edge. Zed responds to Microsoft adCenter's advanced targeting, explaining that if it is too specific, it may not get used. He then responds about click fraud, that they have the most experience with fraud and they are state of the art by far [I would say only if they have IA, StatePointPlus and TecSec. Otherwise that horse needs new shoes.]. It will be a race the whole time.

 

...........

More excerpts:

Account Structure
- Current structure is flat, like a giant spreadsheet
- New structure is a dynamic structure, more flexible, more relational

[Sounds to me like an unstructured data regime that may be treated relationally. Where have we heard THAT kind of language before?]
-- There are controls at different levels of the hierarchy. Campaign level such as daily spend limit, monthly budget, scheduling, optimization setting and guidelines, default tactic settings, geo-targeting, watch list flag. Ad Group level such as tactic settings, watch list flag, optimization guidelines, creative optimization settings. Keyword level, editorial status, marketplace bid, custom landing URL, alternate text, tactic settings, watch list flag. Ad level, show, long description, landing URL, display URL and editorial status. [Sounds like a WHOLE lot of integration and it was all remedied in 90 days. Hmmm. Then they had to go and put together a culture to be able to deal with the new skill sets and management/governance/testing requirements. A whole LOT of integration going on... how DID they do all that?]

............................

Live Demo of a test account done for us...
- Lots of AJAX

[No doubt – the response should be snappy like a desktop and that's what AJAX was originally staged to address as Microsoft's XMLhttpRequest (and it does what its name suggests – if it's so adequate,why, then, is Microsoft chasing the RSS domain? The XMLhttpArena crowded? No, it's not. Taken? Hmmmm. You may have a point there.).]

[AJAX isn't the issue – the technology used to implement the architecture is not the question in a novel patent – the defined (and in VCSY's place executed) architecture, the enveloping form, and the products produced are the 'question' in question. The degree to which you might integrate the various functions or not when you aim for the same deliverable may make an infringement difficult to prove (complexity by fogged boundaries), the delivered product proves the concepts are in use. This is a dynamic environment where the code is continuously managed and governed even while in use throughout the application's life-cycle. ]


- Same people who helped develop Yahoo! Mail helped with lots of portions on the YSM Panama Interface
[This tells me it's more important you know messaging and transactional scheduling than application building. Uhhhh... yeah.]
- "Watched campaigns" flag, cute
[? Is it cute that machines are 'watching' the campaigns? That's what I think is cute.]
- Within a campaign you see the ad groups, in a similar interface and layout
[Sounds like dynamic content/format management; 'dynamic' meaning any content in any format at any time.]
- Dynamic AJAX drive adjust bid tool, with neat sliders
[In the WebWorld (as opposed to the proprietary object world), AJAX tools will be the realm of really fine looking and well thought-through tooling and the virtualization capability will offer an arbitrary actionface for mating up a control with any other control or feature to build composite format objects that possess knowledge, look. feel and do.]

[The 'feel' of 'look and feel' is what many mistake for 'function' when they erroneously problaim content/format/function management have been combined before. Sorry, pilgrim. You're looking for the Holy Grail Chuggin' Pub on Congress and Commons. Automation is what 'function' means and it means you step out of the boundaries of the 'twist a nob, emote an emation' idea of actuation to providing a service as well as a GUI functionality.]

[And because the assembly of components under a SiteFlash ecology allows for assembling anythin with anything, some envelop pushing concepts will emerge from those people who know more about the subject matter than developers... given developer power with their own industry jargon and actuations. You know some neat and cool and swell animobjects that combine to perform useful automation like balancing your checkbook will be be fashioned together and made available that could, say, do it all right there at the tool on your machine (including thin client) so none of your 'stuff', like, 'goes' anywhere.]

[It's all local or cloud and the 'best security' is the kind that identifies the machines, the configurations, the activity and the strongest encryption architecture available and VCSY markets that... in some instances exclusively with options for a broader range of exclusivity.]
- Shows how budget changes, how they affect the overall campaign
- He shows the "Reports Navigator", you can plot graphs dynamically, etc.

[yada yada yada – like I said, 1. SiteFlash provides an architectural framework to hang all your applications and data/actuation resources (patent #6,826,744) – 2. Emily provides a dynamic, typeless language to describe web applications in abstracted forms up to and beyond human language (patent pending – blocked by {are you ready?} FrontPageTM) – 3. MLE engine provides a virtual executor/agent to conduct the automation described in the Emily language (patent #7,076,521).]

..................

[MY NOTES]

 

[Panama - In the real world, Panama contains a canal connecting one ocean to the next ocean. In a technical framework; This is an interconnection/interoperation functionality which, would of necessity, need XML to conduct an interchange (such inter-operation requires the passing of arbitrary typeless messages being sent between two parties).]

[Roosevelt - In the real world, Theodore 'Teddy' Roosevelt was president (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theodore_Roosevelt) responsible for the Panama Canal. I would think 'Roosevelt' is a very high level construction supervisor to resolve elements at conflict able to knit virtualized objects and elements... able to apply parameters and commands to the project... an application builder. ]

[Cranium - is where it is all figgered out. The hypervisor oversees roosevelt and panama and allows an overview of the entire architecture and all the elements therein with an ability to make arbitrary every element and interface or interconnect for interaction or interoperation.]

[See Footnote 3] 

-------------

[Footnote 1]

[Excerpts for Reference from above mentioned URL http://blog.searchenginewatch.com/blog/061011-094042 Article Posted by Barry Schwartz on Oct. 11, 2006]

[(1) They made a bid at YouTube but those deals broke down, according to the article, and Google "swooped" them up.]

[(2) The new Yahoo search ad system, Panama, is over a year delayed. This "delay has sucked up the company’s engineering resources and prevented it from developing new advertising products.]

[Footnote 2] [http://72.14.253.104/search?q=cache:Oo48vBopDs4J:news.com.com/Gates%2BLonghorn%2Bchanged%2Bto%2Bmake%2Bdeadlines/2008-1016_3-5327377.html+longhorn+rewrite&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=2&gl=us By Michael Kanellos and Ina Fried Staff Writer, CNET News.com Published: August 27, 2004, 1:33 PM PDT Microsoft on Friday set late 2006 as the deadline for it to ship Longhorn, the next major version of Windows.]

[Footnote ongoing]


Posted by Portuno Diamo at 1:22 PM EDT
Updated: Friday, 18 May 2007 7:15 PM EDT
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If you put wings on a brick it would fly.
Mood:  hug me
Now Playing: 'When All The Hot Air In The World Don't Keep You Warm.' Warren Beedy / Billy Bob Burnet
Topic: The Sneaky Runarounds

Modeling is a science.

The clothes are the industry's desire.

The model is the palette.

The ability to mold tools is what allows horizontal adoption.

Industry knowledge and science and art and culture are all content locked up in the 80% of data computers can not touch (at least under DB2 9 [codename Vipers] it can). Thus, these elements of an industry have not yet been translated well into the modeling  industry, for instance. Why? How many artistic geeks are there... really? It's a blend of each (we think) A real typist glides across the keys and is able to trip the switch with the least effort, so it can do what it's supposed to do and move along.

The fingers of a typist address each key in a sequence that is magnitudes more refined than ours. Why is it I know how to touch type and well enough to translate that knowledge into some sort of GUI and underware yet the fastest I can get is the fastest I can go and the best I can reveal is the limit to which you will gain
an expert expression.

A real typist with the technological knowledge I know would be able to devise methods and tests to improve typing performance in large pools of admin talent while they do their work. How? By watching their movement and workflow with each document. By implanting transparent tests in each document the system can track troughout the document lifetime in order to identify bottlenecks. By applying standards of excellence amongst 'top ten' indicators throughout the corporate, governmental, cultural, societal evolution in this monkey-speak we call 'technology'.

The synergy between 'arbitration' (SiteFlash) and 'virtualization' (MLE) and 'actuation' (Emily) mean there is a mediator between process one and process two, a 'know everything necessary' individual acting as an agent between the known and the unknown to act.

Once you see the organic nature of 'technospeak' in a new paradigm where technological functions are not described by a crypto shorthand, but a full fledged wordism driven by a love of man for the sense of order and art in balance, you will be light years ahead of the past-paradigm developers who will always be second best in any industry vertical.

Lucifer was the Morning Star in charge of what we in this world would come to call entertainment. Maybe his problem originated with having only God to entertain.

That is, he was the Morning Star in cultures who believe in such things. These people believe in an entity formed out of cohesive energy capable of full rational and transdental thought. The perfect sense of vibrations gave it a command over the one thing any higher form would appreciate to pass an eternity in the elevator... muzak.

Art or Engineering? That is always the balance point for societal change.

The model walks the runway to show the clothes. The clothes are not there to show the model.

The face does the talking. We're supposed to be watching that instead of focused on what 'it' looks like.

Software is supposed to serve the needs of the customer. Not the customer having to select from an elite cadre of professionals for a servant.

If THAT's how software works, then the world's rationale demands all users take control of their own destiny.

And that envelopes the whole of any future thought in the paradigm.

heh heh heh
pd


Posted by Portuno Diamo at 1:03 PM EDT
Updated: Sunday, 6 May 2007 1:10 PM EDT
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Last flight of the unflyable brick.
Mood:  accident prone
Now Playing: 'When a body bumps a body coming through the rye' (Detective/Thriller)
Topic: Apple Fritters

Ya das ist ein flammenshtinkenpoofgerfluffen.  The German dirigible Hindenburg crashes to the ground, tail first, in flaming ruins after exploding on May 6, 1937, at the U.S. Naval Station in Lakehurst, N.J. (AP)

"Acht das humanzerbashen! Acht das humanzerbashen!" 

Herr Yahoo und Frau Panama est gutwrenchinkderpoppen fur das Gates und Ballmer beshtuffen mit dem winkelshlippen und der crashenfotz.

Zeek Hi y'all. 

index.blog/1686928/when-willy-comes-marchingk-home-again/ 

Mit dos und mit dem vindowsgershtoppen das fliggenshpooner und das shlingengershpoppel kerplunken en das uberpond mit dem pondscummenkaprinkelshtein...

Jilly! Baby Joe is under Mister Wacken's car again. Y'all tie that rope around his little waist tighter so he can't get off our carport.

...aber nicht so. Das Ellison und das Oracle mit dem Sun und der Adobe mit das uberproject flavens der pinkenshtein fur das tabledoilly uber das elephantgerpacken mit das shinengoffpoststroodle vas nicht der plinkenshtickel und trashencannen.

Deesa bulletzashmitzen pointenshtoffel uber das verkenshteinen index.blog/1682851/but-the-norton-said-i-was-over-rhineshticken/
 und der fingershtinkenoopen index.blog/1686542/i-done-looked-out-there-and-they-was-a-squirrel-in-this-old-boys-socks/  macht nicht fur der goshenfloggen mit dem bloggenshtikensenheimer.

index.blog/1684712/bessy-mae-is-gonna-recompany-me-on-the-autoharpy-key-o-g-lil-darlin/
und mixen das froggenshpinkens. 

Jilly, hurry up! Lavonda Wacken's leaving for work in a few minutes and she don't look under the car.

click 


Posted by Portuno Diamo at 12:11 PM EDT
Updated: Sunday, 6 May 2007 12:13 PM EDT
Post Comment | Permalink
My daughter's marrying a boy what racketeers. What's that? I don't know.
Mood:  don't ask
Now Playing: 'Apartment Buildings' Construction of compartmentalized housing explored unearthing lost books. (History)
Topic: Calamity

What's your boyfriend do for a living?

He's a racketeer, Daddy!

Racketeer? What's that? Like a jug band with a accordian or like that?

No, Daddy, he's into stocks and bonds.

Does he wear one of them leather masks and pop whips? 

 

Court: Microsoft, Best Buy must stand trial for racketeering


SAN FRANCISCO


May 4, 2007 10:46am

•  Customers say the companies secretly signed them up for MSN

•  Tapped buyers’ bank accounts

Microsoft Corp. (NASDAQ: MSFT) and Best Buy Co. Inc. (NYSE: BBY) must stand trial on charges they violated the federal anti-racketeering laws, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled Friday.

The two companies are accused of secretly signing up buyers of computers and cell phones for Microsoft’s MSN Internet service.

In reversing a U.S. District Court ruling that had tossed the lawsuit, the court of appeals says there is enough substance to the complaints to bring the companies to trial under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, often called the “RICO” act.

The case started after James Odom bought a PC-based laptop at a Contra Costa County Best Buy store. Data about the purchase was sent to Microsoft as part of a joint marketing agreement between the companies. Microsoft then signed Mr. Odom up for its MSN Internet service and, after a free trial period, began billing him for it.

That was all done without his knowledge or agreement, he says.

A similar incident happened to the buyer of a cell phone at a Reno Best Buy store, the case says. Microsoft withdrew monthly MSN payments from her debit card account for 17 months without her knowledge or permission, the allegations say.

 

Drilldown (My, isn't that appropriate?)




Comments on this story

Mario 5/5/07 11:37 AM
How are people so oblivious that they overlook 17 months of payments of ~$19? It seems amazing to me in this age of "rampant" identity theft, that people continue to conduct their personal finances so carelessly. I guess I'm starting to understand how so many Americans can spend more than we earn. We're just that careless.


R Pendleton
5/5/07 12:24 PM
Without commenting on the legitimacy of the case, I think it is fair to ask if people actually read their bank statements. That it actually took the Reno woman 17 months to notice that her account was being debited is utterly incredible.

Hal
5/5/07 3:37 PM
OK! So most people are idiots ? (Generalisation) Is it still ok to steal from idiots ?

Bruno 5/5/07 3:54 PM
What? Do you know how many couples have a spouse who pays all the bills while the other has no clue. Do you think they question every transaction? Blame it on the people for being stupid, right

Jim
5/5/07 4:10 PM
Whether or not people read their monthly bank statements has no bearing on the illegal act of signing people up and charging them for unrequested services.

 


Posted by Portuno Diamo at 2:46 AM EDT
Updated: Sunday, 6 May 2007 2:48 AM EDT
Post Comment | Permalink
The dog did it.

I gotta tell you; I'm using OpenOffice in coinjunction with this blog and I love it already because it does everything I've wanted in a WYSIWYG editor that can be cut/pasted directly into the Lycos WYSIWYG blog window. OpenOffice gives me a MUCH bigger window (GOD you people are so confining with this little tiny messages textbox. Must be because developers built it and they can't imagine having more than 1000 characters at a time about anything) so I can expressionate in my accustomed REALLY BIG WAY and then copy/paste from that stage to the syndications on this tiny little textbox. The documents are still big. It's the blogs that got small.

Anyway, because it works well in conjunction with other WYSIWYG, integrating OpenOffice with other applications across the web will allow for document driven development of services at the smallest levels. Eventually where your kids will be able to spec out an entire web framework for the family apple orchard business with specification driven service assemblers mating with document editors like OpenOffice And away we go! (Jackie Gleason)

Anywho, I had a wild hair up my a$$ to come on here and give everybody what's tried to take VCSY down a fair to middlin' size piece of my mind.

But, then, I says to myself, I says, 'Self? I do not think Jesus would want me doing that. For "Lo" it says here "I come quickly and I'm gonna kick some cracker ass when I do."' I couldn't kick the box the cracker came in much less the cracker and, since I can't call balls of fire down from the sky, I decided to take the humble side and pray for our enemies... balls of fire ants down from the sky maybe... fire ants on the... 

Oh my sky! It looks like that's what's responsible for the recently reported cases of Scrot's Terror and the Wanga Pangy 'Waddle and Scratch', also known in their island language as 'pucka pucka nook nooka wobba wangy wik wiki nook kapowy' being translated 'kick feet so loincloth rubbeth not on fuzzies'.

I do hear reports amongst the islanders of cases where the disease known in the Wanga language as 'hotcha dooby scritcha witcha maka wangy wango pangy noka nooka maka wiki wonk apango flango dango' meaning 'Frantic Panic' drives the Wangy islanders to dance frenetically driven by the belief in their religion that any minute their manhoods may fall off.

With such primitive torments as 'hotcha dooby' aka 'Frantic Panic' and 'noko poko nooka gona bimba bango pucka pookie' also known as 'Shriveled Snippets', we have little wonder island life has been seen to have its disadvantages recently.

So, a back-channel missionary position in the jungle I will assume and put it to the Wangy populace who have yet to have a come to Jesus meeting regarding various properties in conflict. I believe we should all live in piece. A piece of this from that. A piece of that from this. All different pieces that all make up a big whole.

Posted by Portuno Diamo at 2:18 AM EDT
Updated: Sunday, 6 May 2007 2:22 AM EDT
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Saturday, 5 May 2007
When I see the Grand Canyon I see a long way to go to get to the fishers.
Mood:  a-ok
Now Playing: 'The View From Here' Lovers Leap with their new hit.
Topic: Notable Opinions

This is from an anonymous (see how easy it is to leave a comment here?) comment posted but it's an excellent anologed view of what I was saying about the VCSY patents so I thought I might put it here as a Notable Opinion topic.

Entered: Saturday, 5 May 2007 - 03:00 EDT
Name: "Hey Port"
Comment:

 You don't have to post this, its more of a question to you.  From reading both patents (Siteflash and XML enabler)  This is what came to mind, because you were mentioning how they mirror each other.  I'm just checking in to see if I'm off or not because I don't want to base anymore thought on the idea if its off.

 

Macrocosm and microcosm is an ancient Greek schema of seeing the same patterns reproduced in all levels of the cosmos. It may have begun with Democritus in the 5th century B.C. or with Pythagoras and is a philosophical conception that runs through Socrates, and Plato and through to the Renaissance. With Pythagoras, the discovery of the golden ratio and its philosophical conception called the Golden mean, the Greeks saw that this golden ratio is repeated in all parts of the ordered universe both large and small. The Greeks were very concerned with a rational explanation of everything and saw this repetition of the golden mean as a pattern that was reproduced throughout reality. It is a product of the ancient Greek mentality of seeing reality as a whole and noticing patterns that are repeated throughout all the levels of reality. In short, it is the recognition that the same traits appear in entities of many different sizes, from one man to the entire human population.

  View Target Entry

 

Good ideas have simplicity at their essential root. Good ideas reach a balance naturally by virtue of their form. Bad ideas have complexity at their essential root. Bad ideas require a great deal of force to be and stay balanced. 


Posted by Portuno Diamo at 2:39 PM EDT
Post Comment | View Comments (1) | Permalink
Nuckles Demoan was my name in a former life cycle.
Mood:  bright
Now Playing: 'Kookamonga Kookie' Call girl abducted by Wanga Pangy islanders of Catalina. (Comedy/Sport)
Topic: Apple Fritters

Testify Church! Holylooye.

By: KRBJR
04 May 2007, 10:08 PM EDT
Msg. 157160 of 157164
(This msg. is a reply to 157157 by nicheslapper.)

Hey slapper, don't numerate your poultry till the period of incubation has materialized......he who laughs last laughs best.....Rastamafoo has been trying to tell you folks ya need to beware but I see you folks are taking it personal.....trust me, there is nothing personal, its strictly business......good luck to ya....krbjr

(Voluntary Disclosure: Position- No Position)

- - - - -
View Replies »
 

Like the guy said, nothingk personal. It's just what we do. It's just what krbjr and others alike do - the brethren and sisterns of consistent disappointment, one might say. Knit together in a bond of constant familiar desertation.

Some of it have been at it for seven years+ and perhaps spend more time with 'the crew' than most people spend with their golf clubs and kids combined. We's all tight, jackup.

Somebody tries to smother our baby, we start trying to find out if we can squeeze a little straw in there up the nostril so little junior (aka 'Leetel Keeler' Maxi-lead gas in the tank - make the ultraviolets sheen like a mama bird's pee) can at least make it to the next feeding.

We Promise we'll be nice but it's instinct to protect what is precious and what's more precious than money, right?

Golly gee, Missus Jenkins, city folk ain't never seen a cow et by ants. In the South, fire ants, make the little pissants running through your sugar bowl like it's Pensacola look like pissants. A fire ant is able to cause with one bite a sting and an itch that will forever remind you 'kill the fire ants where ever you find them'. Only one problem is they evolve to immune so the more you try to eliminate them from your property the larger and meaner they are out in the neighbor's property. It takes a village to kill fire ants.  Can't we all just get along? Throw the fire ants a cow every other week and everybody's happy.

How do you get rid of them? Never let them get established in the first place. I know that doesn't help the cow under consumption but it might help others in the heard.

Am I too cute or what? 

Try to fight them now that they are established and they do nothing but bite you every weekend and tunnel while you are at work. 

Like my landscape? It's a lawn with a rose bush and the sky with fire ants falling out of the blue. Things like that happen around twisters. You get cars, trailers, frogs, cows (That's the brown thing falling out of the sky) and just about everything else you can think of fall from the sky after a TexasTittyTwister. Oh... and fireants. A mode of transportation for fire ants just like dust and hail and marbles.


Posted by Portuno Diamo at 1:19 PM EDT
Updated: Saturday, 5 May 2007 1:52 PM EDT
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Friday, 4 May 2007
I done looked out there and they was a squirrel in this old boy's socks...
Mood:  hungry
Now Playing: 'Wick's Waiders' Colonal Rick commands his soldiers in spite of speech impediment. Tyones Power / Humfy Gocart
Topic: Panama

Newbees and Oldbees alike. Yes dammit I do believe Panama deserves its own topic just as Gettysbird or Squirrel Harbor deserve mention in a historical sense to make sure we keep our fodder dry and make sure mudder has at least a tin of porky beans for dindin.

Some of you may have noticed I've updated the timeline with a couple items pertaining to Yayhoo. Some of you wouldn't notice if a squirrel were provisioning for a hard winter in your socks.

I said these mutterings last year about Yahoo/Panama and the oddnesses going on... perhaps somebody can dig them up in the posting histories on Raging Bull VCSY of (who was I then - I can't remember) anyway if you need help ask one of the longs like morrie or sirius or baveman. Leave RR2 alone to battle the beebles.

Yahoo took a very large hit when they had to delay Panama last year... for technical reasons... one week after VCSY received the "XML Enabler Agent" patent. Like Vista was delayed... for technical reasons. Like Leopard has been delayed... for technical reasons.

Panama was the great hope for Yahoo and the delay no doubt took a heavy toll, but they manage to roll it out finally February 1, 2007. One week before VCSY served Microsoft with a cease and desist order on .Net for infringement on VCSY SiteFlash patent.

Here's an interesting article about what folks were looking forward to seeing in Panama: http://blog.searchenginewatch.com/blog/060508-093509

Might I make a suggestion that is not new? There are a number of bloggers suggesting what I am going to say already. They doubtless know much more about the subject than I do, but the suspicion dovetails with some other items that make it seem... well... suspicious.

I do believe Microsoft wants Yahoo particularly for Panama. The implications made by the 'coincidental' dates and events in only this small section of der timeline vershtinken tell my paranoid delusional mind MSFT could then grandfather whatever deal Yahoo may have cut in order to feel comfortable introducing Panama (should Panama actually be using VCSY IP as opposed to the image of a bumbling techrockacy that can't do software right the first time... like Microsoft/Viridian and Apple/Leopard).

Much opinion regards Microsoft + Yahoo a bad fit, assuming MSFT is angling to acquire the audience (is it really worth $50 billion?) and the Panama technology.

Microsoft has not been able to move the bar up on their actually deployed web offerings. If an IP issue is a major reason for the talks, what would regulators think of Microsoft so obviously attempting to gain a shelter from... what? Puny little VCSY?

Something the size of a flea giving an elephant a fit? Am I crazy or what? At its peak, so far, this blog attracts only around 350 readers in spurts.  There's a consistent audience of around 250. Now you know just how 'unknown' Vertical is in computer land.

Days and weeks are ahead and one thing we've learned in our watchings of this interesting technological soap opera: stress across an uncontrollable dynamic mass makes the bad guys make mistakes. 

And boy is this a massive mass. Somebody light some candles and bring in some buckets of holy water. They's gonna be a purging of evil spirits in the halls of ivy. 

 

PS - Yo yup yep. yahooo is only valuable in its "live" search etc. 


Posted by Portuno Diamo at 11:45 PM EDT
Updated: Saturday, 5 May 2007 10:53 AM EDT
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Thursday, 3 May 2007
Cisco came in blastin', drinkin' port.
Mood:  special
Now Playing: 'The Cisco Kid Was a Friend of Mine' War
Topic: The Sneaky Runarounds

 

Bill Gates sells 2,987,500 shares of MSFT at around $30 (~$90,000,000) and the reaction is odd. What I mean is I haven't heard the thoroughly duped mobs screaming in the streets yet.

http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/789019/000090201207000026/xslF345X02/edgar.xml 

I have to say I think Bill Gates is doing the smart thing by selling here. SMart but not necessarily good-guy-like. The more obvious question is, will he be riding south to hole up?

I say strip him of every freckle from that Alfred E. Neuman head.

 

 Alfred E. Neuman milk.jpg

What? Me worry? 

By: 4sirius2
03 May 2007, 07:37 PM EDT
Msg. 184082 of 184085
(This msg. is a reply to 184081 by 4sirius2.)

He's selling near the high for the year, and when the market has topped. Smart play. If you crank in speculation that there's more
trouble ahead for the company and their .Net Framework, then you
have a more compelling cause. You might go farther out on the
proverbial limb and say that they might be in negotiations while
stalling for insiders to exit at the optimum point before settling.

Many times there are more than one or two reasons for something
happening.

(Voluntary Disclosure: Position- Long; ST Rating- Strong Buy; LT Rating- Strong Buy)

- - - - -
View Replies »

 

By: mm-buster
03 May 2007, 07:51 PM EDT
Msg. 184083 of 184087
(This msg. is a reply to 184082 by 4sirius2.)

sirius, I smelt a rat after this PR

By: mm-buster
27 Apr 2007, 06:17 PM EDT
Msg. 157071 of 157148
Jump to msg. #
1.7 Billion in deferred revenue(sounds fishy) imo

http://www.forbes.com/2007/04/27/microsoft-vista-zune-pf-ii-in_jd_0427newsletterwatch_inl.html?partner=yahootix



By: mm-buster
26 Apr 2007, 08:35 PM EDT
Msg. 157052 of 157133
(This msg. is a reply to 157048 by als431.)
Jump to msg. #
I think the numbers could be inflated, so the big boys can sell-off at top dollar! lil VCSY is gonna slay this giant! just my opinion

(Voluntary Disclosure: Position- No Position; ST Rating- Strong Sell; LT Rating- Strong Sell)


AP
Microsoft COO Sells Shares
Wednesday May 2, 2:38 pm ET
Microsoft Chief Operating Officer Brian Kevin Turner Sells 120,000 Shares

NEW YORK (AP) -- The chief operating officer of Microsoft sold 120,000 shares of common stock, according to a Securities and Exchange Commission filing.
In a Form 4 filed with the SEC Tuesday, Brian Kevin Turner reported he sold the shares Monday for $30.03 to $30.06 apiece.

Insiders file Form 4s with the SEC to report transactions in their companies' shares. Open market purchases and sales must be reported within two business days of the transaction.

Microsoft is based in Redmond, Wash.


(Voluntary Disclosure: Position- Long; ST Rating- Strong Buy; LT Rating- Strong Buy)


Posted by Portuno Diamo at 8:11 PM EDT
Updated: Thursday, 3 May 2007 8:40 PM EDT
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