Daniel Marc Gatan Shiplacoff - Los Angeles CA, US Jeremy Godfrey Lyon - Sunnyvale CA, US Paul Mercer - Palo Alto CA, US Ralph Thomas - Palo Alto CA, US
International Classification:
G06F 3/0482
US Classification:
715767
Abstract:
A computing device runs multiple activities concurrently and provides at least two modes for interacting with the activities. The user may toggle between the modes as desired. In a full-screen mode, one activity occupies substantially an entire display screen. In a windowed mode, the activity is visible within a window, and a portion of at least one other window is also visible. In the windowed mode, the user can cause windows to move, thereby changing focus from one activity to another. For example, the window having focus can be moved off the screen, to be replaced by a new window that is then given focus. The windows are ordered in a sequence and move in concert with one another; pushing one window off one edge of the screen causes a new window to appear at the opposite edge. A persistent positional relationship can be established among windows.
- San Diego CA, US Daniel Marc Gatan Shiplacoff - Los Angeles CA, US Jeremy Godfrey Lyon - Sunnyvale CA, US Paul Mercer - Palo Alto CA, US Ralph Thomas - Palo Alto CA, US
A mobile computing device runs multiple activities concurrently and provides at least two modes for interacting with the activities. The user may toggle between the modes as desired. In a full-screen mode, one activity occupies substantially an entire display screen. In a windowed mode, the activity is visible within a window, and a portion of at least one other window is also visible. In the windowed mode, the user can cause windows to move, thereby changing focus from one activity to another. For example, the window having focus can be moved off the screen, to be replaced by a new window that is then given focus. The windows are ordered in a sequence and move in concert with one another; pushing one window off one edge of the screen causes a new window to appear at the opposite edge. A persistent positional relationship can be established among windows.
- San Diego CA, US Daniel Marc Gatan Shiplacoff - Los Angeles CA, US Jeremy Godfrey Lyon - Sunnyvale CA, US Paul Mercer - Palo Alto CA, US Ralph Thomas - Palo Alto CA, US
A computing device runs multiple activities concurrently and provides at least two modes for interacting with the activities. The user may toggle between the modes as desired. In a full-screen mode, one activity occupies substantially an entire display screen. In a windowed mode, the activity is visible within a window, and a portion of at least one other window is also visible. In the windowed mode, the user can cause windows to move, thereby changing focus from one activity to another. For example, the window having focus can be moved off the screen, to be replaced by a new window that is then given focus. The windows are ordered in a sequence and move in concert with one another; pushing one window off one edge of the screen causes a new window to appear at the opposite edge. A persistent positional relationship can be established among windows.
- San Diego CA, US Daniel Shiplacoff - Los Angeles CA, US Jeremy Lyon - Sunnyvale CA, US Paul Mercer - Palo Alto CA, US Richard R. Dellinger - San Jose CA, US
International Classification:
H04M 1/725 G06F 3/0481 G06F 3/0484
Abstract:
A user of a mobile computing device may provide a first user preference for a first type of event and a second user preference for a second type of event, and the mobile computing device may detect an event comprising reception of the first type of event or the second type of event. The mobile computing device may present, along an edge of a touch-sensitive display of the mobile computing device, a banner alert in response to detecting the first type of event, and may present, on the touch-sensitive display, a pop-up notification in response to detecting the second type of event. The mobile device may dismiss the banner alert based on a user swiping the banner alert off the touch-sensitive display.
- San Diego CA, US Daniel Marc Gatan Shiplacoff - Los Angeles CA, US Jeremy Godfrey Lyon - Sunnyvale CA, US Paul Mercer - Palo Alto CA, US Ralph Thomas - Palo Alto CA, US
A computing device runs multiple activities concurrently and provides at least two modes for interacting with the activities. The user may toggle between the modes as desired. In a full-screen mode, one activity occupies substantially an entire display screen. In a windowed mode, the activity is visible within a window, and a portion of at least one other window is also visible. In the windowed mode, the user can cause windows to move, thereby changing focus from one activity to another. For example, the window having focus can be moved off the screen, to be replaced by a new window that is then given focus. The windows are ordered in a sequence and move in concert with one another; pushing one window off one edge of the screen causes a new window to appear at the opposite edge. A persistent positional relationship can be established among windows.
- San Diego CA, US Daniel Shiplacoff - Los Angeles CA, US Jeremy Lyon - Sunnyvale CA, US Paul Mercer - Palo Alto CA, US Richard R. Dellinger - San Jose CA, US
International Classification:
H04M 1/725 G06F 3/0481
Abstract:
A user of a mobile computing device may provide a first user preference for a first type of event and a second user preference for a second type of event, and the mobile computing device may detect an event comprising reception of the first type of event or the second type of event. The mobile computing device may present, along an edge of a touch-sensitive display of the mobile computing device, a banner alert in response to detecting the first type of event, and may present, on the touch-sensitive display, a pop-up notification in response to detecting the second type of event. The mobile device may dismiss the banner alert based on a user swiping the banner alert off the touch-sensitive display.
Paul Mercer, a former Palm executive, is paraphrased asblaming at least some of webOS difficultieson its use of WebKit technology for its core, and the corresponding slowness ofapplications relative to those on the iPhone. Another unnamed employeeindicated that Palm lacked t
Speaking to the New York Times, Paul Mercer, who used to be the senior director of software at Palm, said about the OS: "Palm was ahead of its time in trying to build a phone software platform using web technology, and we just weren't able to execute such an ambitious and breakthrough design.
The TouchPad was doomed from the start"Palm was ahead of its time," but "the technology wasn't there yet," Paul Mercer, a former senior director of software at Palm who worked on WebOS, tells The New York Times. It was supposed to be a smartphone software platform that would rely on web-based apps,
Date: Jan 03, 2012
Category: Sci/Tech
Source: Google
HP's TouchPad Tablet Was Bound to Be a Flop, Some Say
Palm was ahead of its time in trying to build a phone software platform using Web technology, and we just werent able to execute such an ambitious and breakthrough design, said Paul Mercer, former senior director of software at Palm, who oversaw the interface design of WebOS and recruited crucial
Date: Jan 01, 2012
Category: Sci/Tech
Source: Google
Boot up: Apple wins reversal of $625m patent verdict, and more
"HTML5 represents the 'next big step in the progress of the Web,' says Jeffrey Jaffe, chief executive of the World Wide Web Consortium, which guides the development of technical standards. Paul Mercer, a veteran Silicon Valley software designer, says the technology will make it possible to 'achieve the dream of expressive, interactive applications on the Web that are Cupertino-class,' a reference to the headquarters of Apple, where Mr.
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