So far we have three people that have made the same comment about not being the front view. I’m using copy comments as TP tomorrow.

  • @[email protected]
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    96 months ago

    The patent was the tp roll but more so the angular serations that terminate short of the center, so a tearable roll of paper rather than a strip role that had to be torn manually or cut

    • @ByteJunk
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      16 months ago

      So the innovation that was patented is literally “cut it partway through”.

      Patents are inherently stupid and only serve to stifle progress. Change my mind or otherwise just downvote away, works as well.

      • @[email protected]
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        36 months ago

        They are stupid, but helped inventors recoup development costs. It gets abused now, especially with patent trolls. The invention here moved TP from a roll you had to cut or tear, to self tearing segments with enough attached at center that it pulled roll forward…smart at the time…we take this idea of perforated sheets for granted now

        • @ByteJunk
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          16 months ago

          Maybe this invention revolutionised how we clean our butts, or maybe it was utterly trivial and 20 different ways of cutting paper rolls were patented that same year (note that present day rolls don’t even use this method).

          But that’s irrelevant to the point that seems to be implied here that patents somehow contributed to it’s success. They don’t, an invention will be useful or not based on its own merits, not on the fact they’re patented.

          They exist to ensure whoever registered it makes a profit, which is why they’re being exploited way past the point of making up for any good they were supposed to bring…