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DysonInventsBig


Location: USA
Joined: Jul 31, 2007
Points: 1454


Original Message   Jun 28, 2008 12:41 am

Dyson is in the news frequently and so a dedicated thread.

.

This message was modified Aug 2, 2008 by DysonInventsBig



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Acerone


Joined: Jul 25, 2007
Points: 986


Reply #418   Dec 28, 2008 6:06 pm
I haven't been around for a months.. Anything new from Dyson regarding a Stick, Robotic vacuum and a washing machine?
CarmineD


Joined: Dec 31, 2007
Points: 5894


Reply #419   Dec 29, 2008 7:25 am
During the recent  HSN airing of DC21, the dyson Dave guy stated several times that dyson is not just a vacuum inventor but a problem solutions inventor.  He followed the statement with the stat that dyson's work force is comprised one third of engineers and has filed over 635 patents.  Sounds like a patent record.

Carmine D.

DysonInventsBig


Location: USA
Joined: Jul 31, 2007
Points: 1454


Reply #420   Dec 29, 2008 4:51 pm
CarmineD wrote:
During the recent  HSN airing of DC21, the dyson Dave guy stated several times that dyson is not just a vacuum inventor but a problem solutions inventor.  He followed the statement with the stat that dyson's work force is comprised one third of engineers and has filed over 635 patents.  Sounds like a patent record.

Carmine D.


Dyson is the worlds leader in vacuum cleaner technology, yet they sound insecure when they speak of their total world patents when interviewed and/or selling on HSN, this huge patent total can be interpreted as a total of U.S. patents.  I do not believe Dyson has 500 plus engineers and scientists and wonder if this too is an insecure statement (“engineer” is a UK term for a repair technician).  They have other ways of describing themselves that could/would establish themselves as worlds leaders.  Sir James should always be confident and not say anything that can undo his companies/his products integrity, his changing life via his/his people innovations speaks for itself.  Let his innovative lazy competitors hype their tired wares, people are smart enough and will/should see this as nothing but hype (no innovations).  Oreck Canada for example hypes their company as being on the cutting [innovation] edge yet their lack of patents and/or lack of new utility patents tell the reverse story.  Typical to see a vac mfg's. revert to hype when they have nothing new.

DIB
This message was modified Dec 29, 2008 by DysonInventsBig



CarmineD


Joined: Dec 31, 2007
Points: 5894


Reply #421   Dec 29, 2008 7:08 pm
According to recent dyson product literature, and I quote:  "Dyson has over 450 engineers and scientists obsessed with developing new and better products and technology." 

"Obsessed " is a poor choice of words IMHO.  As is the lack of a direct link of these pros to vacuum products and technology, its primary business.   As a consumer for a $500 plus household vacuum, I  really don't care/want to know that hundreds of dyson engineers and scientists are obsessed with better products and technology .............that may be totally unrelated to vacuums.  Or that the company filed 635 patents, many of which are unrelated to the vacuum I'm thinking about purchasing.  And that the company is not an inventor of vacuums but a problem solver.  In other words:  Is this hype, unrelated to the vacuum's performance, substitutes for: Never clogs, never loses suction?

Carmine D

This message was modified Dec 29, 2008 by CarmineD
DysonInventsBig


Location: USA
Joined: Jul 31, 2007
Points: 1454


Reply #422   Dec 30, 2008 5:16 pm
M00seUK wrote:
Thanks for pointing this change out. The use of Flash to present information like this is usually tedious at best, but this Dyson example is quite good.

There's lots of stuff there that even a borderline Dyson obsessive like myself didn't know. If you're new to the world of Dyson, you could literally spend hours here.

Points :-

Videos of dust mites
http://www.dyson.co.uk/insidedyson/#dustmitezoo

See them move and everything!

Things we never launched
The Dyson tank vac:-
http://www.dyson.co.uk/insidedyson/#thingsweneverlaunched

Our family had a VAX 'tank' cleaner at about the time Dyson were looking in to this area. They were popular, the tagline from the TV adverts "The best selling vacuum cleaner that Washes, washes, washes...." True to the write up, the novelty of waiting until the summer to shampoo your carpets soon wore off.

DC06 robot vac
http://www.dyson.co.uk/insidedyson/#dc06

Really good segment, with a number of videos of the machine that haven't been seen before.

Inventions
http://www.dyson.co.uk/insidedyson/default.asp#inventions

Sound absorbent screens, developed by Dyson engineers to filter out human voices - crazy! Dunno about the implied fact that only James Dyson's thumbprint has access all areas around the HQ - but it's certainly true that the workforce as a whole is kept isolated. For example, if you were working in marketing on a certain product, you'd be allowed access to 'the basement' to talk to the people working on your product, but you wouldn't be able to see what else might be going on.

Research, design and development
http://www.dyson.co.uk/insidedyson/default.asp#rdd

Nice video - 'gotta love that giant robot arm!

Dyson HQ
http://www.dyson.co.uk/insidedyson/default.asp#dysonhq

'...there's no air conditioning - displacement ventilation is used to blow cool air in at floor level while warm air naturally rises and is dispersed through vents in the roof'

I remember some years back, the account of a journalist who turned up to interview James Dyson, who was witness to an air conditioning engineer protesting that it wasn't possible to do what James was asking. James was proclaiming "But we want FRESH air", before asking him to go off and think about it again. Clearly, it was somehow resolved!


You're welcome and thanks for your your posting, I read and click on em all.  I friend told me of the/a problem with the diesel filters; what to do/how to dispose of the pollutant’s once they were filtered.

I've seen many U.S. Dyson [not discussed here] dishwasher, clothes dryer and washing machine patents.  Interestingly, LG (pretty sure it was LG) has a patent on a clothes dryer that used a single [tapered] cyclone to remove moisture.

 DIB
This message was modified Dec 30, 2008 by DysonInventsBig



DysonInventsBig


Location: USA
Joined: Jul 31, 2007
Points: 1454


Reply #423   Dec 30, 2008 6:53 pm
CarmineD wrote:
Hello DIB:

His point was you can't sit back and wait.  You have to get out and sell. 

He was not in the sales end, he was part of upper management.  Tho, he held sales persons in all fields in the highest esteem.

I wasn't so young at the time.  I was one of the older crowd in class.  He respected and liked me because I was in business before becoming a college student. 

Carmine D.


Does it take a professor to figure this out?  He would of been much better encouraging you/the class in understanding a widgets potential, the many avenues to profiting from said invention and to take it seriously.  Certainly inventions that can be measured to be radically better are the easiest to get the attention of others and/or profit from.

DIB


DysonInventsBig


Location: USA
Joined: Jul 31, 2007
Points: 1454


Reply #424   Dec 30, 2008 7:16 pm
CarmineD wrote:
According to recent dyson product literature, and I quote:  "Dyson has over 450 engineers and scientists obsessed with developing new and better products and technology." 

"Obsessed " is a poor choice of words IMHO.  As is the lack of a direct link of these pros to vacuum products and technology, its primary business.   As a consumer for a $500 plus household vacuum, I  really don't care/want to know that hundreds of dyson engineers and scientists are obsessed with better products and technology .............that may be totally unrelated to vacuums.  Or that the company filed 635 patents, many of which are unrelated to the vacuum I'm thinking about purchasing.  And that the company is not an inventor of vacuums but a problem solver.  In other words:  Is this hype, unrelated to the vacuum's performance, substitutes for: Never clogs, never loses suction?

Carmine D


Carmine,

The old vacuum cleaner is perhaps thought to be developed as much as it can (just my guess) and Dyson has much competition/future competition (Dyson-like filtering).  Dyson MUST invent outside of vacuums.  He loves inventing and all that goes into it, so invent he will. - That’s the fun stuff.  Even your darling Dave Oreck invents and/or claims to be cutting edge and/or buys inventions outside of his core antiquated vacuum line.

Hype?  Well Dyson/his peoples hype also has patent protection (aka monopoly) which (globally) folks purchase.  Hype comes from manufacturers without producing innovation or innovation with benefits, so they lie and hype their tired wares.

Ironically Amway’s latest television commercials talk of their owning over 700 patents.  Why do they advertise this?  Because it works.

DIB


CarmineD


Joined: Dec 31, 2007
Points: 5894


Reply #425   Dec 31, 2008 7:02 am
Hello DIB:

The good professor's point was that the students should seek positions in sales.  And yes, most college freshmen need a seasoned professor with both academic credentials and real business world experience to steer/guide them into the right professions.  I can't recall at the time if there were any women in the class.  Probably a couple.  Maybe they even became dyson sales reps?

I have great respect for companies large and small which successfully produce and market their products for consumption.  And contempt for companies that can't and say they do [read: hype].  

Your fave inventor's company prefers to file hundreds of patents in lieu of producing/marketing products.  His hopes are that at some future point in time another company will take all the risks to produce and market a consumer good/product that directly/indirectly infringes on a patent.  Then a potential unrealized gain may be made by selling the patents and/or threatening legal actions for patent right infringements.  It's an innovative business approach, indeed.  Certainly full employment for patent right lawyers.  You think the good history lovers of Bath are onto him?

Carmine D.

This message was modified Dec 31, 2008 by CarmineD
M00seUK


Joined: Aug 18, 2007
Points: 295


Reply #426   Dec 31, 2008 12:43 pm
CarmineD wrote:
Your fave inventor's company prefers to file hundreds of patents in lieu of producing/marketing products.  His hopes are that at some future point in time another company will take all the risks to produce and market a consumer good/product that directly/indirectly infringes on a patent.  Then a potential unrealized gain may be made by selling the patents and/or threatening legal actions for patent right infringements.  It's an innovative business approach, indeed.

I think it's misguided to imply that Dyson are typically of this type of behaviour. To my knowledge, they haven't sold the rights of any of their patents, nor do they have any current licensing arrangements in place with anybody else. They have filed a large number of patents in their short history - they even have their own dedicated in-house IP department. But, like any similar technology company, only a proportion of what they patent will make it in to final products.

For example, one patent they have from a few years ago is a cable management system, so that a robot cleaner can clean a room while getting its power from a wall socket. Their method looks good and from the reference sources they're not the only major company who have been investigating this possibility. Presumably, this type of method has yet to make it to market (by anyone) for one of the following reasons :-

1) It doesn't work well enough in practise.
2) It is believed this feature wouldn't be perceived favourably by the consumer.
3) It's not worth taking any further. They've progressed with an alterative method that works better.
4) Recent advances in battery technology will quickly make it redundant.

But, of course, there's no real incentive to not file a patent. Advances in other product areas could make a valid business case at a future date and it prevents any competitor making a claim in the meantime which would invalid the claims.

There are a large number of opportunists purely in business to file patent with no desire at all to ever manufacture a product themselves and simply make as much money as possible by holding the big players to ransom. Partially with software patents, towards which the US parent system is very favourable, unfortunately). These people are the scum of the earth in my view.

In my view, what Dyson does is above board, ethical and exactly the same as any company of the same profile. Please feel free to prove otherwise if you disagree.
DysonInventsBig


Location: USA
Joined: Jul 31, 2007
Points: 1454


Reply #427   Dec 31, 2008 3:43 pm
CarmineD wrote:
Hello DIB:

The good professor's point was that the students should seek positions in sales.  And yes, most college freshmen need a seasoned professor with both academic credentials and real business world experience to steer/guide them into the right professions.  I can't recall at the time if there were any women in the class.  Probably a couple.  Maybe they even became dyson sales reps?

I have great respect for companies large and small which successfully produce and market their products for consumption.  And contempt for companies that can't and say they do [read: hype].  

Your fave inventor's company prefers to file hundreds of patents in lieu of producing/marketing products.  His hopes are that at some future point in time another company will take all the risks to produce and market a consumer good/product that directly/indirectly infringes on a patent.  Then a potential unrealized gain may be made by selling the patents and/or threatening legal actions for patent right infringements.  It's an innovative business approach, indeed.  Certainly full employment for patent right lawyers.  You think the good history lovers of Bath are onto him?

Carmine D.


Carmine,

Inventors (mechanical or otherwise) invent so guys like this professor can have a job and live a more fulfilled life.  Perhaps he and others who influence our moldable youth should wear a sign around their necks with a list of his/her proved-out strengths, this way students will not seek advice apart from this list.

A freshmen buddy of mine was asked by his professor why he was still taking his class...  “Why are you here?  You’re doin it.”...  My buddy had an idea for a widget while only 20 years old, borrowed $10-20k from his dad (a very cool Dad took a 2nd on his home), partnered with another friend (in his mid 20’s), paid a machinist to build some prototypes, applied for a patent, drove 50 miles to a national trade show, showed their widget to anyone who would listen, and ultimately met their future international distributor there, inked a deal, had their distributor pay for their packaging machine (they were out of money).  Within 6-8 months their product was advertised on national television and they were millionaires within 2 years.

Adults need to more responsible when advising our youth (our future).

DIB
This message was modified Dec 31, 2008 by DysonInventsBig



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