I can personally vouch for the usefullness of the
USPTO database (directly as
www.uspto.gov) in
conducting vintage computer research. In my ongoing
research of the history of handhelds/PDAs, the
government's database helped me sort out and link
together all sorts of people/corporate connections
which at first seemed disjointed.
--- Hans B PUFAL <hansp(a)citem.org> wrote:
A new resource :
http://www.citem.org/Patents/Computers
The US Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) maintains
a giant database
of patents dating back to the early 1800's. Patents
issued after 1975
are stored as full text and are searchable. All
earlier patents are
available only as TIFF images and can be recovered
only by knowing
the patent number or by an arduous search system
based on an unobvious
(hence patentable ?) classification system.
The data in these early patents is of immense
interest to anyone interested
in early computer history and I took it upon myself
to begin indexing
the computer related patents. My index currently
holds 880 listings and
many names familiar to the computer history buff can
be found; though many
remain to be discovered.
There is a mass of fascinating documents to browse
through. I have seen
patents running to almost 1000 pages (check out
patent number 3400371
issued exactly 40 years ago today)
The complete index is downloaded as a single HTML
page and I use JavaScript
to provide searching, sorting and statistical
functions. For those who
cannot, or do not want to, enable Javascript, I will
be implementing those
features as PHP code in the near future.
I will also set up a discussion forum so that as you
discover interesting
bits you can transmit them on to others. Many
patents relate directly to
actual commercial machines (see the one listed
above) but rarely name those
machines. It will be useful to know the relationship
between patents and
actual systems.
As always your comments, suggestions and help are
welcome.
Best regards,
-- HansP