The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office officially published two possible key design patents for Samsung today. The first is for a new 'Note' smartphone and the second is for a possible Bixby digital assistant device with a display. The timing of both is interesting. Digital Assistant devices are a focal point of many Silicon Valley companies including Amazon, who released their new Echo Show today, Microsoft, Google Home and likely Apple if rumors pan out this year. The new Note smartphone design is of great interest because of the disaster that the Note 7 proved to be. Whether either design will make it to market is unknown at this time.
Unlike "patent applications," design patents published by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office don't reveal pertinent information about a particular design. We can look at the design and appreciate it for what it projects, but we'll never discover which materials may be used to construct the design. We'll never know what unique internal components may be hidden within the device or learn about any unique features that we could look forward to. All we get is the simple visual of what could be coming down the pipeline.
Design Patent: Note Smartphone
Samsung's Note 7 was a disaster and that may have pushed Samsung to come up with a new design to make the Note 8 exciting. Is the design below a possibility?
Samsung is granted many designs throughout the year and it's hard to bank on a single design being the one Samsung will actually use. But this is one of the first Note-Centric designs in some time and it adds an interesting flare to it. The only negative is the apparent thinness of the design. I'm not quite sure Samsung could pull that off considering how the Note 7 battery caused Samsung a major problem trying to get the Note 7 thinner. But you never know.
Design Patent: Audio Device
Samsung was granted a design today for an "Audio Device." In theory this could be Samsung's answer to Amazon's Echo Show. Samsung will want to have their digital assistant 'Bixby' to be available in every device possible including a standalone device such as the one they've won a design patent for. Of course design patents don't explain the concept in any way shape or form, save for graphics noted below.
Patently Mobile presents only a brief summary of granted patents with associated graphics for journalistic news purposes as each Granted Patent is revealed by the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office. Readers are cautioned that the full text of any Granted Patent should be read in its entirety for full details. About Comments: Patently Mobile reserves the right to post, dismiss or edit comments.
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