Bell Dethroned as Telephone Inventor 75
On Hold writes "The US Congress has decided that A. G. Bell was not the real inventor of the telephone. According to this article, it was invented by a Florentine immigrant called Meucci. Meucci later worked with Bell in a lab, but couldn't afford the patent fees. It seems like Bell could." Wait until you read the stories giving Shawn Fanning credit for inventing P2P...
Internet (Score:1, Funny)
Re:In this, the morons are on the left (Score:2)
Re:If he created it, he invented it. (Score:2)
I have to disagree with you there. Creating and inventing are inherently different. If I create an Apple Pie (by mixing the ingredients together & putting it in the oven) that is very different from inventing Apple Pie, which only one person ever did. The same with the Internet. As a Senator, Gore pushed the legislation that mixed together the ingredients that made the internet, and put them in the oven. (and by the time that oven timer dinged, he was already Veep, and didn't have much say in it anymore. (BTW, anyone else, feel free to use and refine this metaphor I just came up with.)
Re:If he created it, he invented it. (Score:1)
By the same token, one could argue that there is only one Internet, so anyone involved in the creation is thereby involved in the invention. But I only offer that for the sake of argument, not to offer an opinion on the matter.
Re:Al Gore looks for the union label: (Score:2, Informative)
Here's a quote from Vincent Cerf (Yeah, that Vincent Cerf, the one that 'surfing' the internet comes from.) and Robert Kahn (You know, the guy who invented TCP/IP.)
'The fact of the matter is that Gore was talking about and promoting the Internet long before most people were listening. We feel it is timely to offer our perspective. As far back as the 1970s Congressman Gore promoted the idea of high speed telecommunications as an engine for both economic growth and the improvement of our educational system. He was the first elected official to grasp the potential of computer communications to have a broader impact than just improving the conduct of science and scholarship.'
Yes, those are the fucking fathers of the internet collaberating Gore's 'lie'. If Vicent Cerf and Robert Kahn say someone helped create the internet, I'll believe it.
As for the union song, people laughed. It was a joke, period. People don't remember songs sung to them in the craddle, it was a throwaway line. Gore grew up in a very pro-union house, and was making a joke about.
But the real kicker is why the fuck would he 'lie' about that? Let's guess which is more plausible: He was making a joke about the pro-union feeling in his house, or he decided to make a completely unbelivable lie, because people can't even remember things in the cradle, and everyone knows that, for no appearent benefit?
Geez, if he walks in with a line 'I just flew here from Washington, and boy are my arms tired!', will people start nitpicking that he just had a nap on the plane and thus his arms can't be tired?
Edison (Score:1)
Re:Edison (Score:1)
Telsa [essortment.com] lost out to Edison. Once again those with money are in a position to screw the rest of us.
Now what? (Score:2, Funny)
credit where credit is due (Score:3, Funny)
Re:credit where credit is due (Score:1)
Re:credit where credit is due (Score:1)
JOhn
The Dell dude, after mergers (Score:1)
Old news (Score:2, Informative)
Ok, there's also always been the doubt, too, whether it's been him or Bell, but surely nobody thought it was Bell all on his own
Bell (Score:1)
what about elisha gray? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re: what about elisha gray? (Score:4, Insightful)
This is one of the main reasons I think patents are, by and large, bogus. There is a marked tendency for multiple people to "invent" something at essentially the same time.
And that's hardly a surprise, since inventions depend critically on the mass of technology current in society. I conjecture that "little guys" do most of the work, and "inventors" merely skim the cream off the top.
Re: what about elisha gray? (Score:1)
In the old days (ie pre 80s, pre software patents, etc), the people doing the inventing weren't the ones that did the patent filing, and when developing some new breakthrough, running to the patent office wasn't the first thing that came to mind (of the engineer, at least).
The US Patent office has changed their minds 3 times over who invented the microprocessor [digitalcentury.com]. That was the 1968-1971 era, perhaps the biggest invention of the last 50 years, and nobody kept records!
"[Ted] Hoff stated that Intel's patent filing was somewhat casual and that they put their time into making the 4004 work rather that the patent process." So when there is competition, the person that rushes to the patent office with an idea on paper is better rewarded than the person that takes the time to develop and implement it.
1% Inspiration...99% perspiration (Score:2)
screams of hoax to me.... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:screams of hoax to me.... (Score:1)
Re:screams of hoax to me.... (Score:1)
Typing these into this [loc.gov] website should work.
Re:screams of hoax to me.... (Score:1)
Nice try, but it's not. The resolution is in Thomas [loc.gov](the US Congress's online database). Search for "meucci" and you'll find resolution 269.
That said, it's obviously a silly publicity stunt from some Italian-American congresscritter, not actually worthy of much attention. The courts decided the issue moot over 100 years ago, and so it should (in this writer's opinion) remain.
Re:screams of hoax to me.... (Score:1)
Re:screams of hoax to me.... (Score:1)
I found it. The Constitution of the United States, Article 1, Section 8:
The Congress shall have power...To promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries..."
wasn't it..? (Score:2, Interesting)
has anyone else heard of her? - or is this just one of those weird memory-lapses I seem to get every one in a while...
Eliza Gray (Score:1, Funny)
Remember Commodore Grace Hopper? When she was 64 years old, she invented a very popular wonder computer in the early 1980s that bears her title and age.
Wierd... (Score:2)
Alexander Graham Bee-gees. (Score:2, Funny)
Must be true. (Score:3, Funny)
In my city, a developer signed a contract to renovate a building. After spending a couple million dollars, they gave up. Conveniently, the city passed a resolution determining that the renovation project was "complete". Of course, the building is still sitting there unused.
I hate it when the government makes things "true" by legislative fiat.
Re:A new congressional priority. (Score:1)
Seems like a relatively harmless undertaking.
Actually, if Congress has nothing better to do, they should take the day off, dock their pay, and return it to their employers - the taxpayers.
Re:Must be true. (Score:1)
Pi = 3 (Score:1)
doh' (Score:1)
Re:doh' (Score:2, Informative)
And the other guy you mentioned was Elisha Gray. In the patent fight with Bell Gray used Phillipp Reis' invention for his defence ("prior art") but that hasn't helped him - Bell won.
This is standard for almost all inventions (Score:3, Insightful)
Sometimes it's because of the lack of savvy or capital posessed by the true innovator; other times it's that the innovator was operating just outside the realm of either technical practicality or social acceptability.
The true genius of Microsoft was building a business model around that oft-missed truth.
Even the lowly john (Score:2)
Like Thomas Crapper [theplumber.com], whose name is now synonymous with toilet?
Re:Crapper is not real (Score:2)
Re:This is standard for almost all inventions (Score:1)
No suprise (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Weed Eater (Score:1)
Re:No suprise (Score:1)
I mean, the guy liked pigeons.
Elisha Gray (Score:5, Interesting)
The supposed story is that Bell was in collusion with the patent clerk (who was, I believe, his brother-in-law or son-in-law). Elisha Gray began the patent filing process earlier than Bell, but was told that without a working model, no patent would be granted.
While I have no problem with his having to produce a working model, after Elisha Gray turned in his plans for a telephone, the patent clerk (knowing Bell was working on a similar project) gave Bell the plans, and then allowed Bell to apply and receive a patent even without a working model.
So, dammit, I could've been a billionaire. Stupid patents.
Re:Elisha Gray (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Elisha Gray (Score:2, Funny)
I mean, I read the article:
Dude is experimenting in Cuba with electric shocks to treat illness.
Wife becomes paralyzed.
Wife for some reason sells off machines for $6 to a second hand shop.
Probably she'd had enough with his electric shocks, etc. Perhaps he couldn't keep a prototype in the home because anytime he went out for a beer it mysteriously disappeared.
Re:Elisha Gray (Score:2)
Was Gray married before or after this event? I wonder if you would even exist if he had gotten the patent and the wealth, and the debutante wife that he always wanted, instead of the great great grandmother that helped create you!
Edison^WSwan (Score:1)
Re:Edison^WSwan (Score:2)
Everything I know I learned from The Godfather (Score:1)
Michael Corleone: Meucci -- Who's Meucci?
Joey Zasa: He's the Italian-American who invented the telephone. He did it one year before Alexander Graham Bell.
Well, I'll be. Zasa was right.
Not news in Italy (Score:1)
Fascistity is the mother of inwention (Score:1)
Quote from Chekov: "Scotch?"...It was invented by a little old lady from Leningrad"
More importantly (Score:1)
Damn the truth, just give me the facts!