IBM sustains patent dominance

NEWS
IBM gained more US patents than any other company in 2003, Big Blue is expected to announce on Monday.

The computing giant said the US Patent and Trademark Office granted it 3,415 patents, marking the 11th consecutive year the company has been the top recipient. IBM said it is the only company to garner more than 3,000 patents in one year, which it has done for the past three years.

In the past 10 years, the company has sought to make its research division more focused on customer requirements, rather than solely research. Today, many patents originate from customer issues, according to IBM.

"What differentiates IBM from other companies is our ability to rapidly apply these inventions to new products and offerings that solve the most pressing business challenges of our clients," Nick Donofrio, IBM senior vice president, said in a statement.

Software-related patents for IBM are on the rise. Of all of Big Blue's patents, more than 1,400 were in software, marking the second year that more than 40 percent of its patents were in software, the company said.

IBM's 2003 patent crop reflects the company's ongoing "autonomic computing" initiative to make computing systems self-managing and more automated. For example, one patent describes a "self-healing" server that can detect problems and trends.

Other areas where Big Blue bulked up its patent portfolio include: on-demand computing, an effort to make IT resources available as necessary to handle spikes in usage; pervasive computing, which connects handheld computers and other devices to the Internet; and life sciences, which has seen a large increase in investments from computing companies.

IBM flaunts its patent portfolio as a measure of the innovation of its engineers and scientists. But the company's current portfolio is not the best indicator of future products due to the pace at which the Patent Office awards patents, said David Kaminsky, master inventor at IBM.

"The patent cycle is slower than the product cycle now within IBM," Kaminsky said. "To see where IBM is innovating today, you have to look at in-progress patents."

Typically, IBM submits an application for a patent during the product development process, and many enhancements are released into products before a patent is granted or rejected, he said.

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