I previously wrote about New York Law School professor Beth Noveck’s experiment to create a Wikipedia-like system that allows outside peer reviewers participate in the patent examination / review process.
Why? It’s really simple: the US Patent Office is overwhelmed, it has very few examiners with deep knowledge of tax law, especially of “creative technics” – just like it feels outdated in technology, software issues. Add to this the explosion in the number of patent applications “leaving examiners only 20 hours on average to comb through a complex application, research past inventions, and decide whether a patent should be granted.”
In an unlikely cooperation of Government, technology giants like IBM & HP and Academia, the Peer to Patent Project launched last Friday. The new system already has a “competitor”, in the form of a private initiative, Wikipatents.com.
It’s great to see wikis put to good use 
Details on CNet.

the look-and-feel of spreadsheets than with task management / project management systems. I think it’s a great approach – no wonder Smartsheet won two awards at the recent Under the Radar Office 2.0 event.
. By the same token, Smartsheet is not a spreadsheet service – for online spreadsheets you’d have to try
Gotta love this logo on 


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