Thanks for calling this to our attention Svante. I've pasted the information
on to our legal and technical teams for evaluation.
This is not our patent. If you read on, you will see it references Digital
ICE and the Nikon LS2000.
Jack Phipps
Applied Science Fiction
-----Original Message-----
From: Svante Kleist [mailto:svante+filmscanners@nemesis.se]
Sent: Thursday, February 07, 2002 10:27 AM
To: Jack Phipps
Subject: [filmscanners] Re: Digital ICE
Could this be it?
<
http://patft.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?Sect1=PTO2&Sect2=HITOFF&p=1&u=/ne
tahtml/search-bool.html&r=3&f=G&l=50&co1=AND&d=ft00&s1='digital+ice'&OS=%22
digital+ice%22&RS=%22digital+ice%22 >
US pat. no. 6,200,738 filed March 13, 2001
/ Svante Kleist, NEMESIS systemDesign, Stockholm
--On Thursday, February 07, 2002 8:00 -0800 Bob Shomler <bob@shomler.com>
wrote:
>> Digital ICE is unique (and patent protected) in that it "looks
>> through" the surface defects and identifies the underlying
>> information in the film.
>
> Jack, would you please post the US patent number(s) covering this
> capability. That way those of us who are so inclined can go to the
> Delphion site <www.delphion.com> and read the method described in the
> issued patent document.
>
> --
> Bob Shomler
> http://www.shomler.com/
>
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