Thursday, 9 October 2008
An unusual trademark battle ... from Swansea
Step forward Captain Beeny, described by the Western Mail as a "self-styled Welsh superhero and serial election deposit loser". He is to battle with Selfridges, claiming trademark infringement. Find out what it's all about here.
Tuesday, 7 October 2008
Scientists against life form patents
Claiming that such patent rights would make the seeds costlier and would not allow poor farmers to fight the onslaught of climate change, Pat Roy Mooney told an international conference on food security and climate in Delhi: "There are ample local seeds of different crops resistant drought, salinity and water logging. If these traits are used to develop new seeds and patent rights are extended over them, then it would amount to a situation where science has no social responsibility for combating climate change."
He said around 532 applications have been filed in patent offices across the world for patent rights over the knowledge designed to combat the impact of climate change in agriculture. These patent rights have been claimed by leading multinational companies including BASF, Monsanto, Syngenta, DuPont, Bayer. Swaminathan Research Foundation has also claimed process patent rights over three varieties of rice and one on mango, he said.
Mae Won Ho, the director of the UK-based Institute of Science in Society, said that patenting of genes should not be allowed because it is possible that one DNA has many functions and several DNAs have the same function. “This is a nature’s gift and should not be patented,” she added.
Jeans wars - it's all in the tags
Pepe claims that Miller's logo, which encompasses the letter P and is encircled with wings, is too close to its own.
However, Miller has struck back, claiming that his trademark was recorded with the US Patent and Trademark Office on April 1, 2003 - some two months before Pepe registered it with the same office. He is counter-claiming against both Pepe and its directors, alleging malicious interference.
“I went to the website of PepeJeans.com and couldn’t find a circled-P anywhere, on their clothing, or the brand advertising within the site,” Miller told AllHipHop.com.
“I’m the future of affordable fashion and big brands will always hate me. I make clothes for underprivileged and underserved families. I sell jeans for $20 and t-shirts for $10. People don’t buy my clothes for the logo. They buy them because it’s high-fashion at an affordable price.”
Miller has recently signed a major deal with Wal-Mart to stock his lines. He added: "Since they saw fit to go after my retailer, I will return the favor and file suit against several of their retailers like Macy’s, Dr Jay’s, Nordstrom, and Eastbay.”
Wednesday, 27 August 2008
Appointment strengthens Astrum team

PATENT attorneys Astrum have made a key appointment to the expanding team with the appointment of Paula Pegler.
Paula, pictured right, joins the Newport-based company as a paralegal, overseeing patent applications and supporting managing director
The pair have worked together previously, before Dr Whitfield set up Astrum. She said, “People qualified to Paula’s level are very rare outside
“Paula’s work on the procedural aspect of patents will allow me to concentrate on bringing in new clients and grow Astrum successfully. Her appointment will herald the start of another significant chapter in the company’s development.”
Paula will work as the formalities administrator, drawing up the documents for a patent application, monitoring dates and liaising with clients. In turn, Dr Whitfield, who will be president of the Newport Chamber of Trade (ngb2b) from July, will continue building links with technology and innovative companies in
She said, “I am pleased to be part of the team at Astrum, and I look forward to working with Gill and supporting her in the future development of the company.”
Thursday, 8 May 2008
Looking to the past to help our future
We cannot compete with the labour costs of emerging countries, so the best way
Here, Dr
YOU may be surprised to hear this, but it was the Welsh that first flew, made the internet possible, ensured that climate change became an international issue, revolutionised the way we shop, and developed the system that would play a huge role in delivering
Saundersfoot carpenter William Frost flew his creation, Frost Airship Glider, over seven years before the Wright brothers made history – and for a lot longer and a lot further. Unfortunately for him, the occasion was observed rather than recorded. His plane was destroyed in a storm that night, and he was too poor to rebuild it or renew its patent.
Donald Davies developed packet switching, which allows data to be transferred between computer networks, essential for operating the internet - connecting you to Facebook, for example. Treorchy-born Davies is credited with the advancement along with
Abertillery-born Sir David Brunt’s work on air quality and pollution, which began while investigating poison gas dispersal during the First World War, led to fluid dynamics, and how we detect weather change. Another distinguished Welsh meteorologist, Sir John Houghton is co-chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and lead editor of the first three IPCC reports that informed decision-making at the
Pryce Pryce-Jones built and operated the first mail order business in the world. From
Edward Bowen, a
William Jones invented Pi, Arthur Moore – upon hearing the Titanic’s SOS call in his homemade wireless studio in Blackwood – discovered that radio waves could travel far greater distances than first assumed, and William Robert Grove invented the Fuel Cell. Alan Cox developed the linux kernel, an important part of open source software, William Morgan, invented the Vacuum Tube and the Coolidge Tube, and was the founding father of modern actuarial science. Dr Richard Pryce developed the times tables as a teaching aid, Robert Recorde published the first English language book on Algebra which included the equals symbol for the first time, while Alfred Russel Wallace worked with
These were brilliant Welsh men who helped shape the world in which we live today, but are there other ways in which we can tap into their brilliance? Can we utilise them a second time around, use their example to spark a new generation of Welsh innovators?
The first question should be: why should we be looking backwards when planning for the future? Every economy needs a competitive edge, and
There is no way that we can compete with countries like
Many of facilities are only available once you’ve taken the step of setting up your own business. But it is at school level that
We can used the examples provided by Welsh pioneers to demonstrate that background, location and circumstances need not be a barrier to innovation, while demonstrating that education is the key to a successful future.
Would the Assembly consider introducing a Welsh Innovation Day, a once-a-year event across the country - and peculiar to Wales - where students would be able to study the lives and achievements of our inventors, moving on to examine the innovation process before considering and developing their own ideas.
This last part could form the basis of a nationwide competition. It could be organised by teachers and local authorities on either an individual or collaborative basis. There could be tie-ins with local business that could bring them into the classroom, to impart their experience and oversee projects.
They could be asked to financially support the initiative, and that doesn’t only mean prizes. Businesses could back projects with promises to move them into research and development if they are good enough. My own business, for example, could offer to patent innovations arising from such projects and maintain the patents until such a time when their originator is able to develop them into a commercial viability.
It would be easy to dismiss this idea, to argue that it is beyond the abilities of students. But it should be remembered that children do contribute to innovation. Heinz, for example, is forward thinking enough to have its own children’s focus group. Its contribution to the world was the squeezy ketchup bottle that most of us now use.
A Welsh Innovation Day would allow the Assembly to pursue its aims of promoting innovation in education, fostering schools-industry links and shared skills, through an event that it unique to
- This first appeared in The Business magazine of the South Wales Argus on Monday, May 5
A problem with US law
Tuesday, 29 April 2008
Welsh innovators who gave us the modern world
On World Intellectual Property Day (April 26), European patent attorney Dr
THERE have been times when
Intellectual Property means that if you created something, you can own it, and there are worldwide laws to protect your creations from being copied by others.
Innovation remains at the heart of the Welsh Assembly Government’s economic policy. It understands that we won’t compete with emerging nations like
Wouldn’t it be good if the Assembly was to introduce a Welsh Inventors Day in schools, drawing upon the work of these pioneers to encourage tomorrow’s innovators? Students would hear more about their achievements, and could be encouraged to believe in their own creative abilities. Tie-ins with local companies could strengthen the initiative and benefit both schools and business.
Here are some examples of
Edward Bowen
Born in
Graduating from
Radar was as important as the Spitfire, as it allowed a vastly-outnumbered RAF to know when the Luftwaffe was coming. Unable to win air superiority during the Battle of Britain, Hitler shelved Operation Sea Lion - the invasion of the
David Brunt
It should be Abertillery-born Sir David Brunt that we thank for the science of air quality and pollution. He first became involved while serving in the army in the First World War, investigating how poison gases were dispersed.
A brilliant mathematician, Sir David joined the Met Office after the war, and used his skills in statistics to chart fluid dynamics, or the movement of gases, which causes weather change.
Working at a time when airplanes were having an increasing impact on the atmosphere, his later research concentrated on weather conditions and human health, concluding that the ideal climate for man was
Packet switching allows data to be transferred between computer networks. Most of us take this for granted. However, had it not been for the work of Treorchy-born Donald Davies, we would not have the internet.
Graduated from Imperial College London, he went to work with Alan Turing, but it wasn’t long before he earned his mentor’s ire, spotting and pointing out errors in Turing’s seminal paper, On Computable Numbers.
He developed a packet switched network independently of American scientist Paul Baran, who originated the same system for the
William Frost
A carpenter from Saundersfoot, Bill Frost first came up with the idea of constructing a manned flying machine some time in the 1890s.
His creation, Frost Airship Glider, took to the skies on
Unfortunately for Frost, the event was witnessed and not recorded. But he did register the Frost Airship Glider (patent number 1894-20431) in 1894. Sadly, through poverty, the patent lapsed four years later. He died without wealth or recognition in 1935.
John Houghton
Another distinguished Welsh meteorologist, Sir John Houghton is co-chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and lead editor of the first three IPCC reports that were to inform the decision-making at the
Once a professor in atmospheric physics at the
Llandudno-born Hughes Cannon emigrated with her parents to the United States when she was three, and would go on to become a doctor, suffragist and the first woman ever elected to the US Senate.
Her family became Mormons and moved to
Hughes Cannon became involved in the Utah Equal Suffrage Association and, following the restoration of women’s right to vote, she successfully stood as a Democrat against her Republican candidate husband Angus and went on to serve two terms as Utah’s Senator.
During her time in office, she successfully pressed for funding for speech and hearing-impaired students, introduced a law regulating working conditions for women and girls, and established a board of health. She died in 1932.
3.14159265358979323846… and on and on it goes. Pi, the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter, and a seemingly endless number, was first devised by Welsh mathematician William Jones.
Born in Llanfihangel Tre'r Beirdd in
A close friend of Sir Isaac Newton, he published Synopsis Palmariorum Matheseos in 1706, a theorem on differential calculus and infinite series.
His son, also called William Jones, discovered the Indo-European language group, which includes Welsh.
Arthur Moore
It was in the early hours of
It had previously been thought that wireless could travel just a fraction of the 3,000 miles between
Artie joined the Marconi Company and worked on radio fittings on military ships. Later, he developed the thermionic valve that allowed further radio advancement and patented an early form of sonar, before his death in 1949.
Pryce-Jones had established himself as a successful draper when the arrival of the railway and an expanded Post Office led him to realize that remote rural customers could be reached by sending them leaflets from which they could order.
As the railway network grew, Pryce-Jones was able to count Queen Victoria and Florence Nightingale among his customers, and sell Welsh flannel in
He built the Royal Welsh Warehouse, a
Other notable Welsh pioneers
Alan Cox
Developed the linux kernel, an important part of open source software.
William Robert Grove
Invented the Fuel Cell.
Frank Hope-Jones
Developed the Synchronome electric clock system – the 'pip' signal first broadcast by the BBC.
Dyfrig Jones
Developed the theory of planetary radiation.
Ernest Jones
Introduced psychoanalysis into
William Morgan
Inventor of the Vacuum Tube and the Coolidge Tube, and founding father of modern actuarial science.
Dr Richard Pryce
Developed the times tables as a teaching aid.
Robert Recorde
Published the first English language book on Algebra which included the equals symbol for the first time.
Herbert Ackroyd Stuart
Developed and patented a compression ignition engine in 1885.
Sir Tudor Thomas
World famous eye surgeon, he pioneered ophthalmic corneaplasty in the 1930s.
Alfred Russel Wallace
Worked with