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The Wales-Wide Web :: Graham Attwell on Learning, Knowledge and Technology
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Weblog | 455 entries | 26-October-2007 | 1 authors |
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Blog Entry | 0 replies1 resource | 13-March-2006 | Graham Attwell |
British rail filed a patent in 1970 for a nuclear powered flying saucer.
BBC NEWS | UK | British Rail flying saucer plan: Defenders of Patent law say that patent allows inventors to protect their investment and time spent of developing innovation. Opponents - including myself point to the tendency of organisations to patent any half baked idea to stop anyone else developing it and thus stifle innovation. Whilst I can't claim this patent filed by British Rail in 1970 has held back innovation I think it does proof my point of organisations registering patents 'just in case. ' "Recently uncovered plans show bosses filed for a patent in 1970 for a space craft powered by "controlled thermonuclear fusion reaction". With a passenger compartment upstairs, it would have been cheap to run and super-fast, according to its inventor. The proposals were recently found on the European Patent Office website. The original patent application said the reaction would be "ignited by one or more pulsed laser beams". The application was made on behalf of the British Railways Board and the patent was granted in March 1973. A patent document reads: "The present invention relates to a space vehicle. More particularly it relates to a power supply for a space vehicle which offers a source of sustained thrust for the loss of a very small mass of fuel. "Thus it would enable very high velocities to be attained in a space vehicle and in fact the prolonged acceleration of the vehicle may in some circumstances be used to simulate gravity." Technorati Tags: patents, no patent law |