Could be anything. For example, a specific circuit. Patents that claim the use of conventional hardware (i.e. an ordinary phone, an ordinary computer, an ordinary LED, etc.) tend to fall victim to what I’m talking about. You can’t patent an algorithm, a law of nature, etc. You need to patent a specific implementation. So “shine a light on something, then use a computer to figure out what you’re looking at” doesn’t work. A specific circuit that implements some algorithm may very well work.
I can’t tell anything about that from the patents. I’ve said it on here before in old threads, but I never try and draw that type of conclusion from patents. Startups, for example, patent every idea they have, good or bad, in order to increase the value of their I.P. portfolio (if a purchaser doesn’t look too closely) and in order to have fodder to maybe use against someone who sues *them* for patent infringement. There doesn’t need to be any correlation between the patents and the actual work being done; patents are almost never written by the engineers. They just hand a patent agent (not necessarily even a lawyer) a page or two of “my idea is to do XXX” and the patent agent writes up a patent.
I mean I think I answered, and I was trying to avoid being crass, but under duress: “they’re shit at writing patents.” I have to assume it’s not “they’ve done nothing,” but, again, that’s not based on the patents - it’s based on pedigree and purchase price.
Yeah, like I said, I can’t tell how far they are. For $2 billion they must have working prototypes. For all we know they’ve been working with apple for a long time, and the cameras in the new airpod pros coming later this year are specifically doing Q’s algorithms. Putting them in just for hand gestures seems sorta lame.
Yeah. Dunno.