Patent that took down Barnes and Noble's Nook revealed

Monday, California-based technology company Spring Design announced that it had been granted the patent for multiple-screen technology that resulted in a lawsuit with Barnes and Noble over the Nook e-reader last year.

Spring Design debuted its Alex dual-screen e-reader literally one day before Barnes and Noble announced its Nook e-reader in 2009. Both devices utilized a similar LCD and E-Paper design and had similar Android-based architectures. Naturally, a lawsuit was not far behind.

Spring Design's Alex E-Reader - shown by Marvell

Barnes and Noble and Spring Design settled the lawsuit just one month ago; and under the proposed deal, Barnes and Noble would have to become a licensee of Spring Design.

Barnes and Noble nook

Today, the company revealed the patent that will be involved in the licensing agreement (US Patent No. 7,926,072) is actually an API. The patent, which Spring Design first filed in early 2008, covers different scenarios where a single application communicates with two or more complementary displays, including LCD/OLED and EPD (Electronic Paper Display), for command inputs and display outputs.

The API focuses on processing native UI inputs for simultaneous use on native and non-native displays.

7 Responses to Patent that took down Barnes and Noble's Nook revealed

Why Trust Us

At BetaNews.com, we don't just report the news: We live it. Our team of tech-savvy writers is dedicated to bringing you breaking news, in-depth analysis, and trustworthy reviews across the digital landscape.

betanews logo

We don't just report the news: We live it. Our team of tech-savvy writers is dedicated to bringing you breaking news, in-depth analysis, and trustworthy reviews across the digital landscape.

x logo facebook logo linkedin logo rss feed logo

Categories

AI Technology Software Hardware Security

Quick Links

About Us Privacy Policy Cookie Policy Sitemap

© 1998-2025 BetaNews, Inc. All Rights Reserved.