Each year, TIME editors comb through hundreds of new products, services, and ideas to create TIME's Best Inventions issue. Submit yours by July 12 to be considered for the 2024 list. https://ti.me/3KVe8HQ
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Every year, State Farm hosts an Inventor's Recognition Breakfast to celebrate employees who have contributed to the company's intellectual property efforts. This year's breakfast was extra-special, since we had an opportunity to meet Hope S. from the US Patent Office and hear from her team about larger trends in technology and intellectual property. One of my favorite parts of my role at State Farm is thinking far into the future and designing new technology that can help our customers and business. I've co-authored more than a dozen patents, and serve as the IP Liaison between the Life/Health business lines and our IP Office, allowing me to bring inventors together from across our department and help bring their ideas to life. The Inventor's Recognition Breakfast is a great way to come together and see how much progress we've made! In the Audio Synthesis Techniques course that I'm teaching at Illinois State University this semester, my lectures on electronic music history continually emphasize the importance of dialogue between inventors (Thaddeus Cahill, Leon Theremin, Bob Moog & Herb Deutsch, Don Buchla, Serge Tcherepnin, Max Mathews, John Chowning, Miller Puckett, Émilie Gillet, etc.) and artists to collaboratively identify problems that can be solved with innovative technology. Intellectual property is a driving force in this history. For example, Cahill's "Telharmonium" from 1897 (yes, you read that date correctly!) is recognized as the first electronic synthesizer, but was never recorded before it was dismantled in the 1920s - today, our best source of documentation about how it worked (and likely sounded) comes from Cahill's detailed patent diagrams. Or, how Bob Moog decided to only patent a single circuit (the four-pole transistor ladder filter) from the groundbreaking 1964 Moog synthesizer system, which allowed an explosive number of competitors to copy these designs and enter the retail synthesizer market in the 1970s, forever transforming music and film soundtracks. I'm grateful that State Farm supports inventors like me, and love making connections like this to the next generation of arts technologists! "Write like an inventor. Live like one too." - Andrea Gibson, poet #inventor #patents #statefarm #insuranceinnovation #technology #musictechnology #synthesizer
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In this unique series intro, I've utilized real x-ray scans and artfully transformed them using DaVinci Resolve. The result is an introduction that is both visually compelling and emotionally resonant, promising a series that goes beneath the surface in more ways than one.
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Don't miss out on our groundbreaking Whitebook: "The Ultimate Backgrounder on Image Recognition." Whether you're just starting out or looking to deepen your knowledge, this resource is packed with insights you won't find anywhere else. Discover the latest advancements and practical applications of image recognition technology. Click the link to read more and stay ahead in the tech game! Link: https://lnkd.in/gzXfhAfp
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Dive deeper into AMX Muse in less than 8 minutes! This is the first in a series.
AMX MUSE | Technical Hardware Overview
https://www.youtube.com/
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Just wanted to share our latest article, written by Eileen McDermott, with you!
USPTO Announces Fast-Track Pilot for Semiconductor Tech Patents
https://ipwatchdog.com
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Feeling disrupted by innovation costs? Is keeping up with the latest tech too expensive and time-consuming? Learn how simulation software can help you innovate faster and stay ahead of the curve. Watch this video to discover secrets for budget-friendly innovation. https://sie.ag/2gU6ee
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Just wanted to share our latest article, written by Jeffrey I.D. Lewis, with you!
Is the United States’ Nonobviousness Test ‘Plausibly’ Similar to the EPO/UK Inventive Step Standard?
https://ipwatchdog.com
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All Day I Dream About Stories that Sell I Help 5-6 figure course creators & chiropractors get clicks with clear copy that captures your best customers I Get your free 👇 Web Copy Checklist I BWC Podcast host
The best camera is the one you use… You can have the best SLR in the world… But if it’s not in your hand… it’s useless… When I was in third grade… I used a oatmeal box and 110 film… Captured the most magnificent sunset… When I saw the sunset, I could have done two things… Feel regret… 1.) Ah, man, that sunset would’ve looked amazing with my SLR. Take action… 2.) Pull the tape off the pinhole and let the image in. You don’t know what you’re going to get until the film gets developed. It’s the same in your industry... If you wait around for the best tech to capture... Your amazing sunset of a client or opportunity... It might not be there when you come back... No, sometimes you have to just lead with what you have… Open the pinhole camera of your business… And capture the moment… Agree? P.S. How has not having the latest technology stopped your business?
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Now this short article is definitely worth a read!
Immersive Simulation Tool for Automation Programming
americanmachinist.com
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