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(fwd) Death of Grail?

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Jon Piesing)
Fri Aug 25 03:36:11 1995

From: Jon Piesing <jon@prl.philips.co.uk>
Date: Wed, 23 Aug 1995 08:35:37 +0100
To: java-interest@java.sun.com, hotjava-interest@java.sun.com

Something I was forwarded from comp.lang.python ...

Surely there must be some prior art for this one ?

Jon
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From: Bill Janssen <janssen@parc.xerox.com>
Subject: Death of Grail?
Message-ID: <UkCV0f4B0KGWNQuw8N@holmes.parc.xerox.com>
Sender: Bill Janssen <janssen@parc.xerox.com>
Organization: CWI, Amsterdam
Date: Tue, 22 Aug 1995 17:13:15 GMT
Lines: 69

Here's another indication of how out-of-touch our poor patent examiners are:

 ============================================================================
 PRESS RELEASE **************** PRESS RELEASE ***************** PRESS RELEASE
 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------

 EOLAS ACQUIRES COMMERCIAL RIGHTS TO KEY WORLD WIDE WEB PATENT

 8/21/95  CHICAGO:  Eolas Technologies Inc. announced today that it has
 completed a licensing agreement with the University of California for the
 exclusive rights to a pending patent covering the use of embedded program
 objects, or "applets," within World Wide Web documents.

 Also covered is the use of any algorithm which implements dynamic
 bi-directional communications between Web browsers and external applications.

 This development will have a major impact on the ability of Internet content
 providers to exploit the expanding interactive capabilities of the Web to
 gain advantage in the highly competitive online market.

 Currently, various combinations of embedded applets and software development
 APIs (application development interfaces) are major features of Web browsers
 from Netscape, Spyglass, Microsoft, AOL/Navisoft, NeXT, and Sun Microsystems
 (especially Sun's new Java language.  A quote from the current Forbes ASAP
 states "Browsers and servers may come and go, but Sun's breakthrough Java
 language, OR SOMETHING LIKE IT, will be the key to a truly interactive
 Internet...").  Talks have been going on for several months between Eolas
 and several of these companies regarding both the licensing of the
 underlying technology and associated products.

 The licensed technology was invented in 1993 by a team led by Eolas CEO, Dr.
 Michael Doyle, a UCSF faculty member and past Director of the university's
 academic computing center.  Prior to joining UCSF, Dr. Doyle was Director of
 the Biomedical Visualization Lab at the University of Illinois at Chicago.
 He received his Ph.D. from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,
 where he was active in the area of scientific informatics and collaborated
 with several members of National Center for Supercomputing Applications, the
 birthplace of Mosaic.

 According to Dr. Doyle,"We recognized early on that the Web could be
 expanded beyond the limits of plain vanilla HTML document browsing to become
 an all-encompassing environment for interactive applications.  We then
 developed an enhanced version of the recently-announced NCSA Mosaic program
 that added technology which enabled Web documents to contain
 fully-interactive "inline" program objects, called Weblets (by Eolas), which
 one could manipulate in place using the enhanced Mosaic program."

 The first Weblet created was an interactive 3D medical visualization
 application which employed a three-tier distributed object architecture over
 the Internet to allow a "farm" of powerful remote computers to generate
 images of internal human anatomy in response to the Mosaic user's
 interactive commands, all from within Mosaic.  This allowed a user with
 nothing but a low-end networked workstation and the Eolas browser to
 transparently access supercomputer-level power and interactively look inside
 an MRI scan of the human body which was embedded within a Web page.

 The Eolas technology will soon be available for licensing.  Information and
 demonstrations are available at the Eolas World Wide Web home page
 (http://www.eolas.com).  Further information can be obtained by sending
 email to info@eolas.com.


------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 
Eolas(TM) and Weblets(TM) are trademarks of Eolas Technologies
Incorporated.
 Other trademarks mentioned are property of other companies.

============================================================================== 



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