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English(wo)men in New York (Or wherever)

Posted: August 10th, 2010 | Author: mark | Filed under: IP, Knowledge Assets, Patents | Tags: , , , , | 2 Comments »

English(wo)men in New York (Or wherever)
(Or whichever part of The USA they may find themselves)

There’s no doubt that Jonathan Ive, Senior Vice President of Industrial design at Apple Inc, is a highly successful designer. Leaving the shores of Jolly Old England was a great idea for him as it led to him being ranked as ranked by The Sunday Times as one of Britain’s most influential expatriates.

This said, it makes me curious about other Brits who’ve dabbled their hands in the American markets and succeeded. So naturally, I did a search for US granted design patents held by British based inventors, and got this list:

1. Martin WF Dean
A designer for Wolverine World Wide. (i.e. the company that makes Hush Puppies, Caterpillar boots and other work-related footwear brands as well as military boots).

2. Sandra Choi
A designer for the renowned (Malaysian Born) British shoe designer Jimmy Choo. Her most cited shoe is the “coupe” she designed in 2004 (D513846) which is also referenced by designers from Stuart Weitzman.

Sandra Choi. Shoe Patent for Jimmy Choo

3. Manon Belley
Another designer for Wolverine World Wide.

4. Grant A Urie
Yet another designer for Wolverine World Wide.

5. James Dyson
A household name in the UK (awful pun intended). Any self respecting product designer in the United Kingdom should be familiar with the works of James Dyson. Most famous for his iconic bag-less cyclonic vacuum cleaners.

Dyson Vacuum Patent

6. Anthony Dalby
Nokia Corporation. Designer of many of Nokia’s many mobile handsets, including the N90 design.

6_anthony_dalbyn90

The co-designer that Anthony Dalby has worked the most with is Ingve Holmung.

Anthony Dalby had also designed a futuristic looking design for a street cabinet that houses telecommunications equipment; assigned to Nortel. Figure this one out yourselves:

Anthony Dalby. Norton Patent

7. Deborah H Andersen
Yet YET another designer for Wolverine World Wide. This American company sure uses a lot of designers from the UK.

8. Pape John A
John Pape registered a number of designs related to baby and toddler toys for Hestair Kiddicraft Limited. His most cited design is for a teether/rattle toy for babies he conceptualized way back in 1987. Recognize it?

John Pape Teether Patent

9. Thomson Harry S
Another designer for Hestair Kiddicraft who has worked alongside John Pape.

10. Jonathan Kelsey
Another shoe designer for Jimmy Choo. His most cited design is an open toed shoe (D501709) which has oddly been cited by a Nike design (D544691).
Jonathan Kelsey Shoe Patent

So there they are. Britain’s top 10 US design patent holders, by volume, as of date.

By the way, in case you’re wondering. Jonathan Ive has 327 US design patents, all assigned to “Apple Computer.” I guess with a US$1m a year pay packet he doesn’t really need to work for anyone else.

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Patented in China. A Nice Report by Thomson-Reuters

Posted: December 18th, 2008 | Author: mark | Filed under: China, IP, Incentives, Knowledge Creation, Patents | Tags: , , , , | No Comments »
It seems like the nice folks at Thomson Reuters have provided us with a gem of a report written by Dr Eve Y. Zhou and Bob Stembridge.



A gem it is indeed. It seems like the Chinese government are really pushing for an innovation economy by 2020. The incentives are there for companies to file their innovations as they are 1) paid for by the government and 2) further monetary incentives are being given to those who can successfully get patents registered in foreign countries too.



Such incentives seem to be working too, at least so far in the areas of: Digital computers, Telephone and data transmission systems, Natural products and polymers, Computer peripheral equipment and the Fermentation industry. With quite a large amount of filings being made in the last ten years.



I’m not too sure about the law being passed that will force foreign companies to file their innovations in China first or risk losing legal protection. Could this be a potential barrier that foreign companies, who wish to invest in the country, might have to face? On the other hand, at the rate China is going, will the country even need foreign companies in 2020?



Only the future will tell.



You can download the full report here:
Patented in China the Present and Future State of Innovation in China

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