Published: Wednesday August 8, 2012 MYT 8:14:00 AM
Former Apple designer says Samsung phones looked similar
SAN JOSE, California: The focus of Apple Inc and Samsung Electronics courtroom battle shifted to the iPhone's iconic display on Tuesday, as the U.S. company called on a former employee and award-winning graphic designer to back up claims that Samsung gadgets look "confusingly similar."
Susan Kare, who from 1982 to 1986 had a hand in designing icons for the original Macintosh computers, scrutinized 11 of the Korean firm's phones - including the Galaxy S and Epic 4G - and found icons and layouts on screens to be very similar.
Apple is contending that buyers may confuse Samsung devices with the iPhone, and accuses the Asian firm of copying designs and features. Samsung, in turn, has accused Apple of violating Samsung wireless technology patents.
Kare - who is also credited for Microsoft Corp
"There was a big conference table with many phones on it, and some of them were on," said Kare, who followed the late Steve Jobs to his NeXt computer startup in 1986 before starting her own firm. "I could see the screen. I went to pick up the iPhone to make a point about the user interface, and I was holding a Samsung.
"I think of myself as someone who's pretty granular about looking at graphics, and I mistook one for the other."
When it was Samsung's turn to cross-examine Kare, lead attorney Charles Verhoeven switched on a Samsung phone and asked Kare to tell the jury what she saw: a bright white Samsung logo.
In response to Kare's testimony that the icons looked largely similar, Verhoeven shot back: "Have you ever seen triangular icons?"
In an echo of Monday's testimony - when both sides laboriously noted similarities and differences between devices - Verhoeven painstakingly called attention to visual differences between common icons on the iPhone and Samsung's gadgets. They included the short-messaging and calendar buttons.
Apple and Samsung are going toe-to-toe in a high-wattage patent dispute, mirroring a fierce battle for industry supremacy between two rivals that control more than half of worldwide smartphone sales.
The trial playing out in downtown San Jose is one of many disputes between the two around the world that analysts see as partly aimed at curbing the spread of Google Inc's
Tuesday's testimony focused on the iPhone's familiar front face, with its outsized square icons, switching tack from Monday's meticulous review of uniform displays and bezels.
Kare pointed to numerous similarities on Samsung phones, including rounded corners, a range of icon styles from retro-plain to stylized, and an evenly spaced grid.
"It is my opinion that the overall collection of graphic features that makes the overall visual impression could be confusing to a consumer," Kare told the packed courtroom.
Research in Motion Ltd's
"You can do a design without having it be confusingly similar," she said.
APPLE TAPS EXPERT TO TALK BRAND VALUE
The trial has granted Silicon Valley an unprecedented peek behind the curtain of Apple's famously secretive design and marketing machine, and unearthed internal Samsung documents in which the Korean company saw the iPhone as a competitive threat and sought to match it.
Apple's lawyers on Tuesday brought on marketing expert and New York University lecturer Russell Winer to discuss the value of Apple's brand as embodied in the iPhone and iPad, which reinvigorated a then-moribund tablet computer market in 2010.
Samsung "viewed the iPad as a target, one to be emulated, and one to be studied carefully for future refinement," he said. Winer then read from an internal Samsung document - one of many Apple's camp has produced in past days.
"People don't think (the industrial design) of Samsung touchphones are ground breaking," according to the document. "Nothing stands out as something consumers have never seen," Winer recited. He stopped short of saying Samsung might have actually intended to copy Apple products.
Samsung strategy chief Justin Denison has said executives sometimes resort to hyperbole internally to motivate and energize their troops, and that any comments upholding the Apple model might be construed as such.
Apple has ceded pole position in smartphones but remains the leader in tablets, holding fast to its lead as rival products from Motorola, Research in Motion, Hewlett Packard
Speculation has mounted that Apple plans to make a mini-iPad to take on cheaper gadgets from its Korean rival, as well as from Google and Amazon
On Friday, lawyers showed Apple Vice President Eddy Cue, in a January 2011 email, urging then-Chief Operating Officer Tim Cook to build a mini-iPad because he believed there was a market for a seven-inch tablet. Late co-founder Steve Jobs was receptive to the idea, according to Cue's email. - Reuters
- American pastor’s murder: Two more Pakistan nationals charged
- William Yau inquest: Verdict later today
- Haze: Muar’s 200 schools to close temporarily from today’s afternoon session
- MCMC offers free money to small businesses, few takers
- Haze: Muar’s air quality turns hazardous; many private kindies close
- China’s Comtec to build one of world’s largest solar wafer making plants in Kuching for RM1.2bil
- Penang freak storm: Only part of Jalan Macalister is open to traffic; CM annoyed
- Hong Kong national involved in train-car accident in Kota Kinabalu dies
- Chieftains handing out dubious titles
- Titles with no standing draw renewed attention
- Nightmare over topless pictures
- Pakatan MPs to attend swearing-in
- ‘Body buried 13 storeys deep’

- Striptease queen married five times in search of true love, says author
- ‘Divine empowerment’ for Muslim women
- Malaysia PC sales hit 898,000 in Q1, 2013, Lenovo top vendor
- RHB Research maintains "Neutral" on auto sector
- Kulim Malaysia offers RM812.3m for another 20% stake in NBPOL (Update)
- RHB Research maintains "Neutral" on IHH Healthcare
- Sumatec up ahead of meeting on O&G asset buy plan
- Ringgit falls to 1-yr low at 3.2010 versus US dollar
- Malaysia's KLCI falls nearly 10 points in early trade
- Malaysian equities to face selling pressure on Thursday
- Public Invest Research: TSH Resources becoming big cap plantation company
- US stocks down after Bernanke hints at slowing stimulus
- Assore - Assmang approves ferromanganese joint venture in Malaysia
- CIMB Research ups MY EG target price to RM1.74
- Malaysia-Market factors to watch on June 20(Thursday)
- Kulim to take another 20% stake in New Britain Palm Oil Ltd (Update)
- Nusa Gapurna rejects PKNS offer to up stake in PJ Sentral
- Paul Revington is glad to be back to train the Malaysian team
- Heavy task on Faizal’s shoulders
- Singapore Open: Chong Wei Feng fights to survive
- Rachel owes her rich vein of form to change in technique
- Future looks gloomy for men’s squash when Beng Hee calls it a day
- Gavin Green confident he can take on title-holders this weekend
- Zhang switches focus on developing golf in China
- Thaworn hopes to find his ‘A’ game in Selangor Masters
- Khairy: RM8mil to be forked out for Sukma due to lack of sponsorship
- A chance for local cyclists to shine
- Rahul survives weekend of harsh hurdles in Norfolk
- MGF set wheels in motion to unearth young talents
- Steady as Jie goes
- Ferrer loses title after opening round loss
- Heat edge Spurs in overtime to force Game 7 in NBA Finals
- AirAsia wants no further delays in opening of new low-cost terminal KLIA2
- Ringgit falls to 1-yr low at 3.2010 versus US dollar
- AirAsia X shares worth up to RM1.66 each
- Malaysian equities to face selling pressure on Thursday
- Malaysia's KLCI falls nearly 10 points in early trade
- Kulim to take another 20% stake in New Britain Palm Oil Ltd (Update)
- Low bids for Hwang-DBS due to the banking group’s poor Q3 results
- Reality check on Asean Economic Community, is it rather ambitious?
- Nusa Gapurna rejects PKNS offer to up stake in PJ Sentral
- Use of psychometrics assessment for employees can be controversial
- Use of psychometrics assessment for employees can be controversial
- Sumatec shareholders to vote on Kazakhstan oil and gas asset buy
- Sumatec up ahead of meeting on O&G asset buy plan
- AirAsia X shares worth up to RM1.66 each
- 3 parties said to be in talks to take over Luster
- Ringgit falls to 1-yr low at 3.2010 versus US dollar
- Public Invest Research: TSH Resources becoming big cap plantation company
- CIMB Research ups MY EG target price to RM1.74
- Assore - Assmang approves ferromanganese joint venture in Malaysia
- MISC to consolidate ops, re-balance portfolio and income mix


